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Brace Yourself for the Decoding of Private Thoughts by Consumer Gadgets - Everyday devices like headphones and watches could soon interpret your brain activity and inner experiences. Nita A. Farahany, author of "The Battle for Your Brain: Defending the Right to Think Freely in the Age of Neurotechnology," unveils the remarkable potential and alarming risks of this emerging neurotechnology. Get ready to rethink assumptions!You can find Nita at: Website | LinkedIn | Episode TranscriptIf you LOVED this episode you'll also love the conversations we had with Adam Grant about rethinking.Check out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Let's TALK ABOUT IT www.verywisealternatives.com Herbalist Viola Cares --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/verywisealternatives/support
Unlocking the Truth: The Power of No Private Thoughts - A Tribe of Christ Movie Workshop with David HoffmeisterThe course teaches that thoughts are either extended or projected, with God extending creative thoughts of pure spirit.Jesus teaches that we have real thoughts but are unaware of them. These real thoughts are pure spirit and thoughts we think with God. As long as we have private minds, a belief in private thoughts becomes like a dense cloud covering the real thoughts. However, the light remains, and the real thoughts continue on. When we become aware of our real thoughts, we become aware of the Christ thoughts, which are pure, loving, and have no distortions.Projections, or ego thoughts, can create a private world that cannot be shared, like a nightmare. Jesus calls this projection "littleness" or "madness," it is expected to describe these private thoughts as judgments, grievances, evaluations, and comparisons. Jesus teaches that if you believe you have private thoughts, you are judging yourself.This movie workshop features a new format of movie-making: three movies are combined to create an experience beyond mere entertainment.To participate online in a Tribe of Christ Movie Workshop with David Hoffmeister, join our online community: https://programs.the-christ.net/products/communities/tribe-of-christIf you want to know more about David Hoffmeister and Living Miracles events, here is more information: https://circle.livingmiraclescenter.org/events.Recorded online, August 24, 2024, at La Casa Quantico, Chapala, Mexico.
"Welcome to a unique collective reading centered around someone dear to you. Join us as we delve into the intricate layers of their emotions, including karmic energies, the purpose of your bond, and the telepathic thoughts they may be harboring about you.In our video series, we specialize in exploring themes of love and relationships through collective tarot readings, delving into the intimate whispers of the heart. Viewers are invited to discover profound insights into their romantic relationships, unveil concealed feelings, and seek direction on their path to love."
"The bigger the gap between our negative private conversations and spoken public conversations, the more stress we will experience." - Chuck WisnerIn this episode, we're really looking at the difference between how we are thinking and what we are actually verbally saying to others in conversation. Closing the gap between what we are thinking and what we are saying is important. Tune into find out why. The Art of Conscious Conversation: Transforming How We Talk, Listen, and Interact by Chuck Wisner Website: https://www.drewrosscoaching.com/Instagram: @drewrosscoachingEmail: drewrosscoaching@gmail.com
On this episode, Payton delves into the Hodges Family Murder, an incident that occurred in a quiet town, where an unknown assailant killed an entire family in their own home. Socials and more: https://linktr.ee/bingedpod Forensic Files, episode “Private Thoughts,” aired April 23, 2003 on CourtTV New Detectives, episode “Dead Wrong, aired October 14, 1998 on The Discovery Channel murderpedia.org/male.B/b1/bramblett-earl.htm clarkprosecutor.org/html/death/US/bramblett845.htm#:~:text=Bramblett%20spent%20a%20few%20hours,potatoes%2C%20corn%20and%20chocolate%20cake. charleyproject.org/case/angela-mae-rader Newspaper.com sources: www.newspapers.com/image/920379413 www.newspapers.com/image/919572115 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is the landscape of your mind your private sanctuary filled with thoughts and imaginings that may not always be suitable for others to hear about? What do you do when someone urges you to reveal your innermost thoughts—especially those that could potentially offend them? Is full disclosure always the best policy, or do you have the right to keep some of what happens in your mind sacred?
Hey! I'm Xander. I work a regular nine-to-five like everyone else. But what I really dream of...is being a ringmaster. Speaker
The Confident Closer® - Secrets For Success In Selling, Marketing & High-Ticket Sales
It's FUNNEL HACKING LIVE 2022! Today I wanted to share my private thoughts as I get ready to speak at FHL, pass along some public speaking tips and let you know what is really going through my mind as the time for me to walk stage draws near. Join me in getting real as I share my excitement, and my nervousness in these last moments of preparation for FHL 2022. Let's go!!! Connect with Eileen If you'd like to learn how to do 6 & 7 figure DAYS selling your high ticket offer at virtual events, head on over to https://acceleratemyrevenue.com/ (https://acceleratemyrevenue.com/) and apply for our free 5-day challenge.
“Negative influences and problems. Unfortunately, we live in a society that constantly bombards us with images of sex that have very little to do with healthy sexuality. In movies, on TV, in books, and in magazines we are exposed to countless examples of impulsive, irresponsible sex. People are treated as sex objects and sex is often portrayed as a form of power and control over another person. It's no wonder that many of us have experienced some tragic consequences of mischanneled sexual energy, such as sexual abuse, compulsive sexual behaviors, sexual exploitation, sexually transmitted diseases, unwanted pregnancy, and/or chronic sexual unhappiness. Studies in America reveal that: 1 in 3 females and 1 in 6 males are sexually abused in childhood. 1 in 4 women are raped sometime in their lifetime. 1 in 4 Americans will have a sexually transmitted disease sometime in their lives. 1 in 2 American women will have at least one abortion by the time they are 45 years of age. 1 in 20 Americans (mostly male) engage in sexually compulsive behavior. 1 in 5 women and 1 in 10 men report that sex gives them no pleasure. What's been missing Most of the sex education available in the world today focuses on reproduction, birth control and disease prevention. While this is important information, it stops short of helping us learn what we need to know to prevent sexual abuse, addiction, and dissatisfaction. In addition, many of us need new information to overcome problems caused by past sexual hurts so that we can go on to experience healthy sexual intimacy with a partner. As a sex educator and therapist, I meet many people who have trouble conceptualizing Healthy Sex. They want to know: "How does healthy sex differ from sexual abuse?", "How does healthy sex differ from sexual addiction?", and "What are the conditions necessary to ensure that the sex I'm having is healthy?" About the author: Wendy Maltz LCSW, DST is an internationally recognized author, speaker, and sex therapist. Her books include The Porn Trap, The Sexual Healing Journey, Private Thoughts, Passionate Hearts, Intimate Kisses, and Incest and Sexuality.” I want to make it clear that experts say that sexual addiction doesn't exist, but that compulsory sexual behavior does. Abortions are not bad because there are legitimate reasons for obtaining them. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/antonio-myers4/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/antonio-myers4/support
Bayou Baby/Midwest Kid/New York City Hard Knock Graduate living in Atlanta, Ga...Fior "FiFi Writes" Baptiste wrote her first song at 7 years old, and her pen hasn't dulled since. Early in her career, she moved to New York and lived in Covenant House where she pursued music and landed the opportunity to pen songs for a then teenage Jazmine Sullivan. Later in her career, she wrote for an artist by the name of Jzanell on her album "Private Thoughts".FiFi stepped away from music to work as a booking agent, but her calling to create music took over; she has completed her long-awaited first project..."Cheap Liquor".Her debut video, “Ideal (Reloaded)” is available on YouTube!
Welcome to Day 4! Really, what is she thinking? Am I alone at thinking about what others are saying about me? Well if you answered no, then listen to this episode. We will dive in on what to do if you are concerned about what other think and how you may be operating in your business. Let me know your thoughts/takeaways. Visit me on Facebook and be sure to follow on Instagram @ PrettyBlessedUnlimited. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/prettyblessedu/message
The Private Thoughts of a Mogul Mom in the Making! Welcome to day 2! Ever compared your beginnings to someone's ending or middle? If yes, STOP! Check out today's episode on why this is hurting your entrepreneurial journey. Let me know your thoughts/takeaways. Visit me on Facebook and follow on Instagram @PrettyBlessedUnlimited. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/prettyblessedu/message
Welcome to the miniseries! It's day 1 and we are diving right in. If you have been on a constant start and stop cycle of launching your dream, then friend, this is for you. Let me know your thoughts/takeaways. Visit on Facebook and follow on Instagram @PrettyBlessedUnlimited See ya tomorrow! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/prettyblessedu/message
My thoughts and opinions on the movie Kong vs Godzilla.Private Thoughts: "Yeah! Go Godzilla!"
Three things to know today Is encryption private thoughts? https://www.theregister.com/2021/03/30/intel_wiretapping_data/ https://www.engadget.com/michigan-judge-private-chats-gretchen-whitmer-plot-terrorist-threat-170845492.html Apple’s repair program expands https://mashable.com/article/apple-independent-repair-provider-program-global/ https://thenextweb.com/plugged/2021/03/30/apple-is-making-it-easier-to-get-your-iphone-fixed-at-a-repair-shop-near-you/ https://www.thestar.com.my/tech/tech-news/2021/03/31/pandemic-drives-phone-computer-right-to-repair-bills-in-us AND Ubiquiti’s catastrophic breach https://edtechnology.co.uk/cybersecurity/more-solutions-do-not-deliver-data-greater-protection-confirms-cybersecurity-report/ https://krebsonsecurity.com/2021/03/whistleblower-ubiquiti-breach-catastrophic/ https://www.theverge.com/2021/3/31/22360409/ubiquiti-networking-data-breach-response-whistleblower-cybersecurity-incident https://www.cyberscoop.com/solarwinds-cyber-command-dhs-russia/ Want to get the show on your podcast app, or get the written versions of the stories? Subscribe to the Business of Tech: https://www.businessof.tech/ Support the show on Patreon: https://patreon.com/mspradio/ Want our stuff? Cool Merch? Wear “Why Do We Care?” - Visit https://shop.spreadshirt.com/mspradio Follow us on: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mspradionews/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mspradionews/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mspradio/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/28908079/
A sudden telepathic connection pushes an unhappy woman into the arms of her brother-in-law. Written by Mary McDonnell. Performed by Kimberly Chatterjee, Adrián Burke, Brandon Zelman, Ryan Karels, Amy Warren, and Mary McDonnell. The Truth Instagram Twitter
A sudden telepathic connection pushes an unhappy woman into the arms of her brother-in-law. Written by Mary McDonnell. Performed by Kimberly Chatterjee, Adrián Burke, Brandon Zelman, Ryan Karels, Amy Warren, and Mary McDonnell. The Truth Instagram Twitter
A sudden telepathic connection pushes an unhappy woman into the arms of her brother-in-law. Written by Mary McDonnell. Performed by Kimberly Chatterjee, Adrián Burke, Brandon Zelman, Ryan Karels, Amy Warren, and Mary McDonnell. The Truth Instagram Twitter
Professor Emily C. Burns, Terra Foundation Visiting Professor in American Art, gives the third in the series of The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914. Performing Innocence: Primitive / Incipient The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914 Moderator: James Smalls, Professor and Chair of Visual Arts, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Between the end of the US Civil War and the start of World War I, thousands of American artists studied and worked in Paris. While popular thought holds that they went to imbibe culture and attain artistic maturity, in this four-part lecture series, Professor Emily Burns explores the various ways that Americans in Paris performed instead a cultural immaturity that pandered to European expectations that the United States lacked history, tradition, and culture. The lectures chart knowing constructions of innocence that US artists and writers projected abroad in both art practice and social performance, linking them to ongoing conversations about race, gender, art making, modernity, physio-psychological experience, evolutionary theory, and national identity in France and in the United States. Interwoven myths in art and social practice that framed Puritanism; an ironically long-standing penchant for anything new and original; primitivism designed by white artists' playing with ideas of Blackness and Indigeneity; childhood's incisive perception; and originary sight operated in tandem to turn a liability of lacking culture into an asset. In analyzing the mechanisms of these constructions, the lectures return to the question about the cultural work these ideas enacted when performed abroad. What is obscured and repressed by mythical innocence and feigned forgetting? Abstract: Projections of different ideas of innocence became entangled in the representation of Black US character in fin-de-siècle Paris. By pairing new research on blackface minstrelsy and painter Henry Ossawa Tanner in the American Art Association of Paris with the displays of Blackness curated by Black intellectuals in the “Exhibit of American Negroes” in the Paris Universal Exposition of 1900, Professor Burns argues that American minstrelsy in Paris built a racialized “primitive” identity that caricatured Black men as effeminate and emasculated, while the latter exhibit constructed innocence grounded in claims of youth, newness, and incipient culture. While the curators staunchly and effectively rejected narratives of primitivism, these tropes of the new simultaneously paralleled and reinforced performances of cultural innocence in the largely white US community in Paris. Biographies: Emily C. Burns is an Associate Professor of Art History at Auburn University where she teaches courses on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American, Native American, and European art history. Her publications include a book, Transnational Frontiers: the American West in France (University of Oklahoma Press, 2018), which analyzes appropriations of the American West in France in performance and visual and material culture in the tripartite international relationships between the United States, France, and the Lakota nation between 1867 and 1914, as well as journal articles, exhibition catalogue essays, and book chapters related to art and circulation, US artists in France, and American impressionism. She is currently completing a co-edited volume with Alice Price on global impressionisms entitled Mapping Impressionist Painting in Transnational Contexts (forthcoming from Routledge). During her tenure as the Terra Foundation for American Art Visiting Professor in the Department of History of Art at the University of Oxford and a Visiting Fellow at Worcester College, Professor Burns will complete her second book, Performing Innocence: Cultural Belatedness and U.S. Art in fin-de-siècle Paris. Dr. James Smalls is an art historian, with a focus on the intersections of race, gender, and queer sexuality in the art and visual culture of the nineteenth century, as well as the art and visual culture of the black diaspora. He is the author of Homosexuality in Art (Parkstone Press, 2003) and The Homoerotic Photography of Carl Van Vechten: Public Face, Private Thoughts (2006). He has published essays in a number of book anthologies and prominent journals, including American Art, French Historical Studies, Third Text, Art Journal, and Art Criticism. His book chapters and articles include: Menace at the Portal: Masculine Desire and the Homoerotics of Orientalism (2016), The Soft Glow of Brutality (2015), A Teacher Uses Star Trek for Difficult Conversations on Race and Gender (2015), Racial Antics in Late Nineteenth-Century French Art and Popular Culture (2014), Sculpting Black Queer Bodies and Desires: The Case of Richmond Barthé (2013), and Exquisite Empty Shells: Sculpted Slave Portraits and the French Ethnographic Turn (2013). Smalls is currently completing a book entitled Féral Benga: African Muse of Modernism. In 2006, Smalls curated a two-part exhibition at the Baltimore Museum of Art on the art, career, and international influence of the African American artist, Henry Ossawa Tanner. In 2009-2010, he served as the Consulting Editor for the five-volume set of The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art. In 2015 he was appointed to the Advisory Board for The Archives of American Art Journal. Dr. Smalls holds degrees from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), in Ethnic Arts (B. A.), and Art History (M. A., and Ph.D.). He has taught at Rutgers University, Columbia University, and at the University of Paris.
Professor Emily C. Burns, Terra Foundation Visiting Professor in American Art, gives the third in the series of The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914. Performing Innocence: Primitive / Incipient The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914 Moderator: James Smalls, Professor and Chair of Visual Arts, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Between the end of the US Civil War and the start of World War I, thousands of American artists studied and worked in Paris. While popular thought holds that they went to imbibe culture and attain artistic maturity, in this four-part lecture series, Professor Emily Burns explores the various ways that Americans in Paris performed instead a cultural immaturity that pandered to European expectations that the United States lacked history, tradition, and culture. The lectures chart knowing constructions of innocence that US artists and writers projected abroad in both art practice and social performance, linking them to ongoing conversations about race, gender, art making, modernity, physio-psychological experience, evolutionary theory, and national identity in France and in the United States. Interwoven myths in art and social practice that framed Puritanism; an ironically long-standing penchant for anything new and original; primitivism designed by white artists’ playing with ideas of Blackness and Indigeneity; childhood’s incisive perception; and originary sight operated in tandem to turn a liability of lacking culture into an asset. In analyzing the mechanisms of these constructions, the lectures return to the question about the cultural work these ideas enacted when performed abroad. What is obscured and repressed by mythical innocence and feigned forgetting? Abstract: Projections of different ideas of innocence became entangled in the representation of Black US character in fin-de-siècle Paris. By pairing new research on blackface minstrelsy and painter Henry Ossawa Tanner in the American Art Association of Paris with the displays of Blackness curated by Black intellectuals in the “Exhibit of American Negroes” in the Paris Universal Exposition of 1900, Professor Burns argues that American minstrelsy in Paris built a racialized “primitive” identity that caricatured Black men as effeminate and emasculated, while the latter exhibit constructed innocence grounded in claims of youth, newness, and incipient culture. While the curators staunchly and effectively rejected narratives of primitivism, these tropes of the new simultaneously paralleled and reinforced performances of cultural innocence in the largely white US community in Paris. Biographies: Emily C. Burns is an Associate Professor of Art History at Auburn University where she teaches courses on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American, Native American, and European art history. Her publications include a book, Transnational Frontiers: the American West in France (University of Oklahoma Press, 2018), which analyzes appropriations of the American West in France in performance and visual and material culture in the tripartite international relationships between the United States, France, and the Lakota nation between 1867 and 1914, as well as journal articles, exhibition catalogue essays, and book chapters related to art and circulation, US artists in France, and American impressionism. She is currently completing a co-edited volume with Alice Price on global impressionisms entitled Mapping Impressionist Painting in Transnational Contexts (forthcoming from Routledge). During her tenure as the Terra Foundation for American Art Visiting Professor in the Department of History of Art at the University of Oxford and a Visiting Fellow at Worcester College, Professor Burns will complete her second book, Performing Innocence: Cultural Belatedness and U.S. Art in fin-de-siècle Paris. Dr. James Smalls is an art historian, with a focus on the intersections of race, gender, and queer sexuality in the art and visual culture of the nineteenth century, as well as the art and visual culture of the black diaspora. He is the author of Homosexuality in Art (Parkstone Press, 2003) and The Homoerotic Photography of Carl Van Vechten: Public Face, Private Thoughts (2006). He has published essays in a number of book anthologies and prominent journals, including American Art, French Historical Studies, Third Text, Art Journal, and Art Criticism. His book chapters and articles include: Menace at the Portal: Masculine Desire and the Homoerotics of Orientalism (2016), The Soft Glow of Brutality (2015), A Teacher Uses Star Trek for Difficult Conversations on Race and Gender (2015), Racial Antics in Late Nineteenth-Century French Art and Popular Culture (2014), Sculpting Black Queer Bodies and Desires: The Case of Richmond Barthé (2013), and Exquisite Empty Shells: Sculpted Slave Portraits and the French Ethnographic Turn (2013). Smalls is currently completing a book entitled Féral Benga: African Muse of Modernism. In 2006, Smalls curated a two-part exhibition at the Baltimore Museum of Art on the art, career, and international influence of the African American artist, Henry Ossawa Tanner. In 2009-2010, he served as the Consulting Editor for the five-volume set of The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art. In 2015 he was appointed to the Advisory Board for The Archives of American Art Journal. Dr. Smalls holds degrees from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), in Ethnic Arts (B. A.), and Art History (M. A., and Ph.D.). He has taught at Rutgers University, Columbia University, and at the University of Paris.
Professor Emily C. Burns, Terra Foundation Visiting Professor in American Art, gives the third in the series of The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914. Performing Innocence: Primitive / Incipient The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914 Moderator: James Smalls, Professor and Chair of Visual Arts, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Between the end of the US Civil War and the start of World War I, thousands of American artists studied and worked in Paris. While popular thought holds that they went to imbibe culture and attain artistic maturity, in this four-part lecture series, Professor Emily Burns explores the various ways that Americans in Paris performed instead a cultural immaturity that pandered to European expectations that the United States lacked history, tradition, and culture. The lectures chart knowing constructions of innocence that US artists and writers projected abroad in both art practice and social performance, linking them to ongoing conversations about race, gender, art making, modernity, physio-psychological experience, evolutionary theory, and national identity in France and in the United States. Interwoven myths in art and social practice that framed Puritanism; an ironically long-standing penchant for anything new and original; primitivism designed by white artists’ playing with ideas of Blackness and Indigeneity; childhood’s incisive perception; and originary sight operated in tandem to turn a liability of lacking culture into an asset. In analyzing the mechanisms of these constructions, the lectures return to the question about the cultural work these ideas enacted when performed abroad. What is obscured and repressed by mythical innocence and feigned forgetting? Abstract: Projections of different ideas of innocence became entangled in the representation of Black US character in fin-de-siècle Paris. By pairing new research on blackface minstrelsy and painter Henry Ossawa Tanner in the American Art Association of Paris with the displays of Blackness curated by Black intellectuals in the “Exhibit of American Negroes” in the Paris Universal Exposition of 1900, Professor Burns argues that American minstrelsy in Paris built a racialized “primitive” identity that caricatured Black men as effeminate and emasculated, while the latter exhibit constructed innocence grounded in claims of youth, newness, and incipient culture. While the curators staunchly and effectively rejected narratives of primitivism, these tropes of the new simultaneously paralleled and reinforced performances of cultural innocence in the largely white US community in Paris. Biographies: Emily C. Burns is an Associate Professor of Art History at Auburn University where she teaches courses on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American, Native American, and European art history. Her publications include a book, Transnational Frontiers: the American West in France (University of Oklahoma Press, 2018), which analyzes appropriations of the American West in France in performance and visual and material culture in the tripartite international relationships between the United States, France, and the Lakota nation between 1867 and 1914, as well as journal articles, exhibition catalogue essays, and book chapters related to art and circulation, US artists in France, and American impressionism. She is currently completing a co-edited volume with Alice Price on global impressionisms entitled Mapping Impressionist Painting in Transnational Contexts (forthcoming from Routledge). During her tenure as the Terra Foundation for American Art Visiting Professor in the Department of History of Art at the University of Oxford and a Visiting Fellow at Worcester College, Professor Burns will complete her second book, Performing Innocence: Cultural Belatedness and U.S. Art in fin-de-siècle Paris. Dr. James Smalls is an art historian, with a focus on the intersections of race, gender, and queer sexuality in the art and visual culture of the nineteenth century, as well as the art and visual culture of the black diaspora. He is the author of Homosexuality in Art (Parkstone Press, 2003) and The Homoerotic Photography of Carl Van Vechten: Public Face, Private Thoughts (2006). He has published essays in a number of book anthologies and prominent journals, including American Art, French Historical Studies, Third Text, Art Journal, and Art Criticism. His book chapters and articles include: Menace at the Portal: Masculine Desire and the Homoerotics of Orientalism (2016), The Soft Glow of Brutality (2015), A Teacher Uses Star Trek for Difficult Conversations on Race and Gender (2015), Racial Antics in Late Nineteenth-Century French Art and Popular Culture (2014), Sculpting Black Queer Bodies and Desires: The Case of Richmond Barthé (2013), and Exquisite Empty Shells: Sculpted Slave Portraits and the French Ethnographic Turn (2013). Smalls is currently completing a book entitled Féral Benga: African Muse of Modernism. In 2006, Smalls curated a two-part exhibition at the Baltimore Museum of Art on the art, career, and international influence of the African American artist, Henry Ossawa Tanner. In 2009-2010, he served as the Consulting Editor for the five-volume set of The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art. In 2015 he was appointed to the Advisory Board for The Archives of American Art Journal. Dr. Smalls holds degrees from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), in Ethnic Arts (B. A.), and Art History (M. A., and Ph.D.). He has taught at Rutgers University, Columbia University, and at the University of Paris.
Tom started the show out questioning how private thoughts can be punishable before getting some follow ups from Doc and Smarty Marty.
You're receiving my Tuesday podcast because you're a paying subscriber of Maybe Baby. Thank you! To listen in your preferred app, click “Listen in podcast app.” Then it should automatically populate there every week.Good morning on this average Tuesday,This week I invited my favorite people in the world, Kelly and Andy Nahman, my older siblings, onto the podcast to discuss my last newsletter, #30: Intrusive thoughts. We talk about anxiety spirals, insomnia, and the strange neuroses we tend to leave out of small talk. I may be biased because I love my siblings and want to know everything going on in their brains all the time, but this one made me laugh a lot. I do want to warn that our tone may come across as insensitive or cavalier due to the gravity of the topics…so if dark humor isn't your thing, or you're not in a place to make light of serious things, this one might not be for you. Here we are looking happy in 1992:And yet our jet-black eyes hint at something dark beneath…Hope this serves as a welcome distraction on what might be—no reason, just spitballing—a stressful day. And let Kelly know in the comments if you, too, fantasize about being a pivotal witness in a criminal trial.Thanks for listening,HaleyToday's thematic musical accompaniment (a cover of Simon and Garfunkel's “Sound of Silence”) is by Avi Bonnerjee, recorded on our couch on Monday at my behest while he was busy doing other things! This month a portion of subscriber proceeds will be redistributed to Palante Harlem Inc, a New York-based nonprofit working to reduce poverty, end tenant exploitation, and advocate for safe housing in Harlem.Subscribe • Request a free subscription • Ask Dear Baby a question • Gift a subscription This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit haleynahman.substack.com/subscribe
David Hoffmeister - Full Transparency Online Retreat - How to apply No People Pleasing and No Private Thoughts on your Spiritual Journey. Svava sing "Bring it Back" and "Only the Truth is True" in the beginning and at the end of the session. This "Transparency" online weekend retreat session with David Hoffmeister was recorded on the evening of September 4, 2020, at the Quantico studio in Ajijic, Mexico.To learn more about upcoming live Awakening from the Dream online retreats with David Hoffmeister and the Living Miracles community, go to https://livingmiracles.org/events
Our private thoughts - the main spiritual battleground. - meditation 2020-06 --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/edenredux/support
Season 3, Episode 2. Is Season 3 alive? Yes, it is. Here we are in February - in the middle of pitching at television show based on season 1 of this podcast. We got behind. We'll stay behind for a while. But we love you. Thank you for listening. More to come. Video interviews and audio.
There is a small shadow over this month's sunny ride that is our usual Too Slow To Disco show: The passing of Andrew Weatherall. Like many others of my generation I started listening to dance music because of his early remixes and productions for Primal Scream, Happy Mondays, Saint Etienne. He made me come out of my pure white Indie-corner and embrace electronic music, dub a.m.m.. He is maybe THE MOST IMPORTANT and influential DJ/producer to me, because - looking back - he single handedly sparked the light that made me become a DJ (and do whatever I do all my life now, for example this here). So this month's show starts with a tribute to the man, featuring one of his not so obvious works, which I am very much in love with for ages: "Smokebelch“ (beatless mix) as Sabres Of Paradise. What follows is pretty much what you expect from us: Smooth, elegant slightly erratic Slow Jams about love or breaking up, from the 70s to now, full of Bottled Sunshine! Stay safe and take care!Andrew Weatherall tribute: THE SABRES OF PARADISE - Smokebelch II (Beatless mix)THE AVALANCHES - We Will Always Love You (feat. Blood Orange) STREAMER feat Private Thoughts in Public Places - Start ButtonSERGE GAINSBOURG - L'Anamour (V4YS Rework)POOLSIDE - I Feel High (feat. Ben Browning)SELLOUTS - Still StrangersUKOKOS & JABCO - Keep Rising All Night Long (Sunday Service Mix)SOULD OUT - Heart To GivePREP - Love Breaks DownMIAMI HORROR - Restless (Turbotito Remix)SECRET RENDEZVOUS - Settle DownKRAAK & SMAAK - Don't want this to be over feat. Satchmode (Jean Tonique Remix)CLASSIXX - What's Wrong With That? (Silly Love Songs Rework)
Dear Leader...The Real Cost to Be the Boss with Tiffany Rashel
This is a BONUS episode that addresses a real-time social media occurrence. A recent conversation with an NBA players wife sparked a social media backlash because of a transparent admission of her private feelings. Tiffany Rashel addresses the value of vulnerability as leaders and the importance of sharing challenges in spite of public opinion and backlash. #vulnerability #humanity #truth --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dearleader/support
Do you ever fall into the trap of trying to keep everybody happy? I used to be quite the "people pleaser" and it only contributed to my anxiety. In today's episode, David Hoffmeister is going to give you a totally new perspective on people pleasing and we will also dive into the teaching from A Course in Miracles on "no private thoughts." David's examples and teachings are sooo helpful! Mystic David Hoffmeister is a living demonstration that peace is possible. His gentle demeanor and articulate, non-compromising expression are a gift to all. He is known for his practical application of the non-dual teachings necessary to experience the Unified Mind. His clarity about the function of forgiveness in spiritual awakening and his radical use of mindful movie-watching in the release of judgment is unsurpassed. The purity of the message he shares points directly to the Source. Over the past 33 years, David has traveled to 44 countries across 6 continents to extend the message that Truth is available for everyone, now. To learn more about David and get episode takeaways, visit the show notes at https://FromAnxietyToLove.com/12 Love this episode? Leave your comments in our Facebook Group! Follow Corinne: Facebook Instagram Pinterest
Firefighters find an entire family dead inside their burned-out home, and at first glance, it appears to be a case of murder-suicide. But clues found at the scene soon lead investigators to believe otherwise. Forensic science, a time card, a drawing, and an audiotaped diary help prosecutors to build their case, and bring the killer to justice.To learn more about how HLN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
It's. That. Time. Again! Thought Vomit!!! Private Thoughts for Public Consumption. Episode 10: The Top 5 Episode! Top 5 Comics and Top 5 MC's. Mitch breaks down his list and challenges you to examine your own. Good times! Good stories. Real... Funny.. Talk. Let's get into it!!!
Are You Ready?! It's here!... Thought Vomit!!! Private Thoughts for Public Consumption. Episode 9: Kim & Kanye Kardashian, Pusha T's clap back, and the Epic-ness of the 2018 NBA Finals. Mitch spits out his Thoughts on these topics and more! And Mitch's Musical Moment "Boo'd Up" by Ella Mai. Let's get into it!!! @thoughtvomitpod @mitchmarchand @kaz1music
It's that time again! Thought Vomit!!! Private Thoughts for Public Consumption. Episode 8: Drake vs Pusha T, the Whitney Houston Album Cover, and the NFL gets it wrong again! Mitch goes in on these topics and more! And a very special Mitch's Musical Moment from a new artist, BB_LaBeonka, who also happens to be Mitch's daughter. It's a good time for your ears! Let's go!
In Ajijic. Mexico at Angel Flores with James Twyman and his community the beauty of two simple rules “No Private Thoughts” and “No People Pleasing” was a gift. It challenged me to work through an event I share with you…..Empower yourself to think out of your box and reach higher to deal with the chaos … Continue reading »
In this sixth episode of Live at Liberty: A Saxophone Podcast, the usual cast of characters welcomes guest Bruce Williams onto the show for the first of many interviews. Bruce discusses his background and influences, his connection to the Liberty Music family, his new record "Private Thoughts," endorsements, horror stories, and much much more. As always, a special thanks to our friend, Bruce Williams for the music featured in this podcast. Come visit us at: Liberty Music Associates 1100 Globe Avenue, Moutainside NJ, 07092 908-379-3344 https://libertymusic.us/
"I'm trying to explain to you and to your listeners what makes for a happy life." — Thomas Jefferson, as portrayed by Clay S. Jenkinson President Thomas Jefferson speaks about Monticello, his private and daily habits, his compulsiveness and how his Virginian hospitality cost him a personal fortune. Find this episode, along with recommended reading, on the blog. Thomas Jefferson is interpreted by Clay S. Jenkinson.
https://mwge.org/This movie (Déjà Vu), directed by Henry Jaglom, is a classic for undoing the ego. It contrasts special relationships in this world with those given over to a Higher Purpose, illustrating the way both the ego and the Spirit seem to work in our lives.The two main characters are brought together by Destiny/Spirit in a powerful vibrational relationship that calls into question everything else in their life. Each of them is already married or engaged to be married, and yet the Spirit has another plan for them. While their current special relationships are based on economics, future goals, and maintaining the status quo, this new relationship assignment is based solely on healing, following one’s heart, and opening to True Love. Though resistance and fear may be high, the Spirit never gives up on us, and the experience of True Love is inevitable in the end!This Spreaker recording includes David’s pre-movie setup talk, the many points throughout the movie when he paused it to give commentary, and the after-movie discussion that ensued. It was recorded on June 6, 2017 with a group of students at the Living Miracles Metaphysical Center in Kamas, Utah. To enjoy this audio recording along with the movie, here is one way we suggest you do so:1. Rent or obtain the movie Déjà Vu directed by Henry Jaglom. You can often rent movies online through YouTube, Amazon, or other online movie services.2. Listen to the first 7 minutes and 18 seconds of this recording up until the point when David says, “It’s a classic!” Then pause this recording and watch the whole movie.3. After you’ve seen the movie, listen to this recording starting from where you left off at 7:18. You’ll then be able to hear all of David’s commentary throughout the movie as well as the after-movie commentary on it. This will surely give you a much broader perspective on the movie than you may have otherwise had!SECOND OPTION for STEP #3: Another suggestion once you've started the movie, would be to practice pausing it whenever you feel intuitively guided and then listening to some of this recording. Go back and forth between this recording and the movie, as intuitively guided, and enjoy the way Spirit illuminates the scenes you've already scene, perhaps right after you've seen them! There’s really no one right way to do this, so just relax and you’ll surely have a profound experience!For more Spirit-inspired movie talks, we recommend that you subscribe to our online Movie Watchers Guide to Enlightenment at MWGE.org. There you will find many movie talks like this, many of which are integrated with the actual movie so you can watch the movie and hear David’s commentary all-in-one. This movie with David’s commentary may in fact already be there by the time you subscribe! https://mwge.org/
You have no private thoughts. You think you do, but you don't! You think your mind is like Las Vegas. You think “what happens in my mind stays in my mind.” Well, it doesn't. All of your thoughts manifest in physical, outward behaviors. The thoughts you think about another person, no matter how hard you try to hide them, control your body language when you are in that person's presence. The thoughts you think about yourself, your worthiness, your capabilities, will directly impact the physical actions you take or don't take in life. Listen as I explain: Listen on iTunes or Listen to/download this episode here: Love the show? Click here to Tweet a shoutout! Want to know how you can support the LIAM Mission? Click here. Have a question or topic you'd like addressed on the show? Please let me know by clicking here! Mentioned in this show: Svava Brooks Svava's Website. www.educate4change.com Transform Your Life! Retreat in Portland, OR Restory YOU! Personal Development Workshop Worry No More! book Download: Affirmations for Abundant Living LIAM Team Life Coaching Community Subscription/Social Links: Subscribe on iTunes! Subscribe on Stitcher Radio! Watch on YouTube! LIAM on Twitter: @LifeIs262 LIAM on Facebook / LifeIsAMarathon Subscribe to the LIAM Mailing List www.BruceVanHorn.com Bruce Van Horn on Twitter Bruce Van Horn on Facebook
You have no private thoughts. You think you do, but you don’t! You think your mind is like Las Vegas. You think “what happens in my mind stays in my mind.” Well, it doesn’t. All of your thoughts manifest in physical, outward behaviors. The thoughts you think about another person, no matter how hard you try to hide them, control your body language when you are in that person's presence. The thoughts you think about yourself, your worthiness, your capabilities, will directly impact the physical actions you take or don't take in life. Listen as I explain: Listen on iTunes or Listen to/download this episode here: Love the show? Click here to Tweet a shoutout! Want to know how you can support the LIAM Mission? Click here. Have a question or topic you'd like addressed on the show? Please let me know by clicking here! Mentioned in this show: Svava Brooks Svava’s Website. www.educate4change.com Transform Your Life! Retreat in Portland, OR Restory YOU! Personal Development Workshop Worry No More! book Download: Affirmations for Abundant Living LIAM Team Life Coaching Community Subscription/Social Links: Subscribe on iTunes! Subscribe on Stitcher Radio! Watch on YouTube! LIAM on Twitter: @LifeIs262 LIAM on Facebook / LifeIsAMarathon Subscribe to the LIAM Mailing List www.BruceVanHorn.com Bruce Van Horn on Twitter Bruce Van Horn on Facebook
The illusion of private thoughts. This is a power thought that helps me today because it motivates me to work and be the best person I can be, and it helps me to not feel alone with whatever thoughts I have. I hope this message is useful for you, and I hope you have a nice weekend! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jerrybanfield/support
"Ira and Abby" is a 2007 movie that hilariously depicts a Guided relationship used by Spirit for the purpose of healing! This delightful film is a ride from special to holy relationship as Ira and Abby (and everyone else in their life) go through quite a ride that leads to the decision for Present Love above all else. Listen to this edited audio of David Hoffmeister's commentary before, during, and after the film for profound insights on this movie as an example of how Spirit can use relationships for the healing of our mind.Recorded Jan 4th, 2016 at the Living Miracles Metaphysical Center in Kamas, Utah.
Jesus teaches in the Course that "You have no private thoughts, and yet that's all you are aware of." We are not the thinker of the thoughts. When private thoughts are protected, the identification of being the thinker of the thoughts is also protected. By expressing private thoughts as guided, we are supporting each other in letting go of the false identification and coming to an awareness of truth.
Private Thoughts in Marriage: The Spoken Unspoken Synopsis: It’s been said that people only say about 10% of what they think. Marriages are plagued with unspoken truths, deception, and hurts that are never shared within the marriage. Often, these explode to the surface in times of great anger and frustration, leaving marriage partners shell-shocked and confused. Transparency and honesty are the only ways God relates to us, and they serve as the models for the type of marriage he wants us to have. Creating safe places and safe ways in which to fully share and disclose helps us to become the type of Christ-followers we need to be. Text: Psalm 139:23-24 – Search me, know me, lead me.
Humanitas Visiting Professor in Chinese Studies 2012-13 The Humanitas Chair in Chinese Studies has been made possible by the generous support of Sir David Tang Professor Chen Yung-fa Chen Yung-fa (Modern History Institute of the Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan) will give a series of three public lectures on The Meaning of the Chinese Communist Revolution and participate in a concluding symposium. Information about the symposium will be posted at a later date. This second lecture is Chiang Kaishek's Experience with Britain and his Private Thoughts, 1917-1949. Abstract Despite the efforts to woo the Chinese Communist Party, Britain was unable to protect and to preserve its economic interests in Communist-occupied China. Using all the means available to it, the Communist regime squeezed and confiscated British properties and cleaned out the last vestiges of British imperialism in China. Only after China reopened its door to the capitalist world, while insisting on the restoration of control over the Kowloon area that consisted of more than 90% of the British colony of Hong Kong, did the British government agree to return Hong Kong island, thus fulfilling the dream of a generation of Chinese intellectuals who hoped to wipe clean the remains of British imperialism. As the foreign policy of Chiang Kaishek’s government is well known to historians, this essay only seeks to examine his experiences with the British during his mainland China years. Chiang’s diaries, which are now available, show how he reacted to the Shameen tragedy in which many of his cadets were killed by British machineguns, how he reacted to the British defense of Burma and India, and how he reacted to Churchill’s determination to hold the Empire intact and to perpetuate British privileges in Hong Kong and Tibet.