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Quick Wins, Quotas, Queries, Queue Management, Quitting, Quality Control, Quirks, Questions, Quests, Quick, Quiet working space; Quiet the Mind; Question everything; Quality over Quantity, Quotidian, Quietude, Quotient, Quotes... Continue reading →
Sermons from Old South Church in Boston
In this installment of "The Truth in This Art," Rob Lee sits down with photographer Faith Couch to explore the influence of her southern heritage on her narrative-driven work. Faith opens up about her commitment to capturing the nuances of black daily life, striving to represent these stories authentically. She talks about the significance of working with others based on mutual respect and the lessons learned during her final year at MICA, as well as her move to Yale. Throughout the conversation, Faith offers her perspective on creativity, the value of honesty, and the role of community and introspection in her life. The episode also ventures into Faith's hobbies beyond the lens and wraps up with her thoughts on discovering a sense of belonging within and the beauty of embracing life's shifts.Episode Highlights:Southern Roots and Their Impact (00:00:48) Faith discusses how her southern heritage influences her creative process and artistic expression.A Lifelong Affinity for Photography (00:05:00) Faith reminisces about her early experiences with photography and the influences that shaped her passion.Filling the Void in Black Narratives (00:11:00) Faith talks about her aim to provide a more complete portrayal of black life through her photography.Celebrating the Quotidian in Black Life (00:16:00) The importance of documenting everyday moments in the lives of black individuals is discussed in this part.The Ethics of Collaboration and Consent (00:18:00) Faith dives into the importance of ethical practices and consent in her photographic work.Navigating Editorial vs. Fine Art Photography (00:21:00) Faith reflects on the differences between editorial and fine art photography and her approach to each.The Quest for Authenticity (00:24:30) In this part, the conversation focuses on Faith's commitment to capturing genuine moments and true emotions.Crafting a Sense of Belonging (00:51:00) Faith discusses the concept of creating a sense of home and staying grounded regardless of location.Key Takeaways:1. Embrace your roots – they can deeply influence your creativity and authenticity in your work.2. Early passions can inform and shape your career path – nurture them.3. Strive to fill gaps in representation – your work can contribute to a more inclusive narrative.4. Celebrate the ordinary – everyday moments can hold extraordinary significance.Website and Social Media Links:aithcouch.comX: @FaithCouch5Instagram: blackpowerprincessLinkedIn: Faith CouchThank you for tuning into this insightful episode of "The Truth in This Art" with the talented Faith Couch. If Faith's journey and perspective resonated with you, we encourage you to explore her work further by visiting her website and following her on social media. Your support means the world to artists like Faith, and it helps to amplify the narratives that need to be heard. While you're at it, please take a moment to rate and review this episode—it helps us reach more listeners like you. And if you want to contribute to the growth of our platform and get access to exclusive content, consider supporting us on Patreon. Your generosity fuels our mission to bring these important conversations to light. Thank you for being a part of our community and for your continued support! This program is supported (in part) by a grant from the Robert W. Deutsch Foundation. If you have a story about art, culture, or community, share it with us at rob@thetruthinthisart.com for a chance to be featured on 'The Truth In This Art' podcast.Follow The Truth In This Art on Twitter, Threads, IG, and Facebook @truthinthisart Original music by Daniel Alexis Music with additional music from Chipzard.Episode illustration by Alley Kid Art.About "The Truth In This Art""The Truth In This Art," hosted by Rob Lee, is a podcast that explores the essence of creativity and its community impact, amplifying artists' voices and their profound stories.Connect with me:Website | Twitter | Instagram Support the show:Merch from Redbubble | Make a Donation ★ Support this podcast ★
Life is filled with boring, mundane, ordinary moments, even seasons. God's grace is with us in those times as well as the extraordinary ones. How can we learn to be more attuned to God's grace in all our days?
In this podcast, we cover - 1. Role of serendipity in building meaningful careers 2. Ethical principles toward shaping more inclusive technologies 3. Feminist and anti-racist approach to AI Eleanor started her career in financial technology before co-founding an e-commerce company. Now a Senior Research Fellow at the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence at the University of Cambridge, she maintains her strong interest in commercial concerns and opportunities in AI by working to bridge the gap between industry in academia in AI Ethics. She runs a team that is building the world's first free auditing online tool that allows companies to meet the EU AI act's obligations - which have been enriched with feminist and antiracist principles. She previously explored what AI ethics currently means to AI engineers at a major tech multinational the size of Meta. Her advisory work in the AI Ethics space also includes the UN Data Science & Ethics Group's 'Applied Ethics Toolkit'. On this site you can learn more about her past and present projects, media appearances, and publications. She has an international dual degree PhD from the University of Bologna and the University of Granada, where she was an Early Stage Researcher for the EU Horizon 2020 ETN-ITN-Marie Curie Project “GRACE” (Gender and Cultures of Equality in Europe). She has made two short films about science fiction utopias and dystopias, and co-created a feminist quotation-generating App called 'Quotidian'.
On the show, The Word Of The Day "Quotidian", easily my top 5 most embarrassing moment in life at the grocery store the other day, my shitty thumbnail is making me stupid self-conscience in real life, finally watched the Foo Fighters movie Studio 666 on Tubi ( and their algorithm is hilarious), I take at an Irish comedy Father Ted & more #whatthehelleverything Podcast recordings, including song and other sorts of reactions happen Monday, Wednesdays & Fridays at 9AM Eastern, mostly on Patreon with the occasional public recording on YouTube. If you take part in live recordings, feel free to come at me with your best reaction suggestion!If you're enjoying the content and/or interested in supporting the upcoming Smitty Learns Irish PUB-Cast, album reactions and more, perhaps consider becoming a Patron for as low as $3 a month. $5 tier for liveset reactions and deep music rabbit hole stuff. The help is immeasurable. https://www.patreon.com/We3smiths Want to check out some more podcasts and maybe consider downloading an episode or two on Spotify for a ridiculous commute or a road trip?Please like and subscribe and if you dig the podcast, there's an entire world of past (and future) episodes to dig through. Some of 'em are actually good!!! The What The Hell Everything Spotify page for audio versions of the podcast. https://open.spotify.com/show/6Bz5kd828SJGJyIYXRm2po?si=102c62f5cc5d4e09 Also, check out my other social media links Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SmittyOnDuhInternet Private Facebook group where I share more content and a growing community- Smitty's SmitHole Slipper Club (Slippers not required but encouraged) https://www.facebook.com/groups/we3smiths Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hungoversmitty/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/HungoverSmitty Spotify Rock Radar / Stoner Reaction Playlist https://open.spotify.com/playlist/23JV982jY8qTrTKpw0lXXg?si=c7097dcf1fc046d8Support the showPlease like and subscribe and if you dig the podcast, there's an entire world of past (and future) episodes to dig through. Some of 'em are actually good!!!https://www.patreon.com/We3smiths Spotify Rock Radar / Stoner Reaction Playlist https://open.spotify.com/playlist/23JV982jY8qTrTKpw0lXXg?si=c7097dcf1fc046d8Also, check out my other social media links Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SmittyOnDuhInternetPrivate Facebook group where I share more content and a growing community- Smitty's SmitHole Slipper Club (Slippers not required but encouraged) https://www.facebook.com/groups/we3smithsInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/hungoversmitty/Twitter: https://twitter.com/HungoverSmittySpotify Rock Radar / Stoner Reaction Playlist https://open.spotify.com/playlist/23JV982jY8qTrTKpw0lXXg?si=c7097dcf1fc046d8
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 31, 2024 is: quotidian kwoh-TID-ee-un adjective Something described as quotidian occurs every day or occurs routinely or typically. More broadly, quotidian is used as a synonym of commonplace and ordinary. // The article offers suggestions on how to gamify quotidian tasks. See the entry > Examples: "Ultimately, the beauty creators offered a behind-the-scenes look at how these top glam squads find quotidian ways to keep their creativity thriving." — Eda Yu, The Hollywood Reporter, 3 Nov. 2023 Did you know? In William Shakespeare's play As You Like It, the character Rosalind observes that Orlando, who has been running about in the woods carving her name on trees and hanging love poems on branches, "seems to have the quotidian of love upon him." The Bard's use doesn't make it clear that quotidian comes from a Latin word, quotidie, which means "every day." But as odd as it may seem, his use of quotidian is just a short semantic step away from the "daily" adjective sense. Some fevers come and go but occur daily; in medical use, these are called "quotidian fevers" or simply "quotidians." Poor Orlando is afflicted with such a "fever" of love.
In this essay, Deric Shannon outlines the anarchist analysis and critique of capitalism. He also gives some potential explanations for capitalism's resilience. Deric Shannon is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Emory University's Oxford College. His most recent books are The State of State Theory: State Projects, Repression, and Multi-sites of Power and Interdisciplinary Approaches to Pedagogy and Place-Based Education: From the Abstract to the Quotidian. Anarchist Essays is brought to you by Loughborough University's Anarchism Research Group and the journal Anarchist Studies. Follow us on Twitter @arglboro. Our music comes from Them'uns (featuring Yous'uns). Artwork by Sam G.
To watch this as a video Download it and play it from the Downloads section in the Castbox app on your device.Meditation practice is a pretty crucial component in your transformation into a more sex-worthy man. Meditation makes you the master of your thoughts, it gets your thoughts working for you instead of you working for your thoughts. Meditation more than anything else teaches you to deal with emotional, mental, and physical fidgetiness. ⏬ Access the three transformational resourceshttps://www.limitlessmindset.com/V-Transformation
Remember, we welcome comments, questions, and suggested topics at thewonderpodcastQs@gmail.com. S4E20 TRANSCRIPT:----more---- Mark: Welcome back to the Wonders Science-Based Paganism. I'm your host, mark, and I'm Yucca. And today we're talking about the summer solstice, the longest point in the year in the Northern Hemisphere. The longest day, the shortest night, and we're gonna talk about what that is, what we call it, what some of the metaphorical themes are that go along with it, and some ideas for rituals to do for the, for the summer solstice. Yucca: Right. And it's another one of those that has a lot of names but at least being one of the solstice, we have a name that. That is pretty common that we could refer to it by, and most people know what we're talking about, right? Yeah. Mark: Yeah. For many, many years, this was referred to in the English speaking world as mid-summer. Mm-hmm. So that's where you get a mid-summer night's dream, all that kind of stuff. And that's what I prefer to call it because I don't like using the, the foreign language names since I've not. Yucca: They aren't your languages. Mark: Yeah. And I'm not drawing cultural elements from those cultures, so why should I take their name? Yucca: Right? Mm-hmm. Right. So you'd like to call it mid-summer. Are there any, is that any other names? Southern Mark: Hemisphere, in which case I would call it Yucca: mid-winter, right? Yes. For us it's usually summer solstice sometimes refer to hafmas. Haf is summer in Welsh, and it's actually a name we made up because the moss is like the, like from the other side of the year, and it's the flip of that. And so it just kind of sounded nice to us. We're like, oh yes, it's the summer, it's the summer muss, right? Mm-hmm. So we call it that or it's our. First summer, it's not midsummer for our climate. Mm-hmm. You know, that some climates It is. I mean, summer has started, I know in the, on the mirror, the calendar here in the United States, it's the official start of summer. That's right. Yeah. But. Climate, I mean, weather-wise, summer is here already for us. Mm-hmm. It's just not the middle of summer. The middle of summer won't be until August. Mark: Right. And, and that's true for us too. I wrote a blog post at atheopagan dot org recently about the fog cycle. Because here in, in the coastal zone in Northern California, what happens is it gets blazing hot inland, like in the Sacramento Valley. Mm-hmm. And the air rises and therefore creates a low pressure zone. Mm-hmm. Because it's expanded. And so it pulls cool moisture laden air in from over the ocean, which precipitates out into fog along the coastal area. Mm. So we get this fog cycle and it's why San Francisco is famous for fog. We get this fog cycle in the summertime and when the fog cycle starts. It's really kind of the climatic beginning of summer, and that's been going on now for about three weeks. Mm. Okay. And what'll happen is we'll have these gray days never rains, just gray, overcast, and then eventually, It cools down enough that that thermal cycle doesn't work anymore. Mm-hmm. And we'll get a few days of bright sparkling sun, usually some blazing heat at the end of that, and then it starts the cycle Yucca: again. Okay. So nice. Mark: That's, that's how we know that summer has started here. Mm. Yucca: I like that. Well, for us, we have them monsoons. So in the desert southwest, much of the desert, Southwest has the monsoons, and we've been getting them this year, which is wonderful because we've had quite a few years of, of just not getting, just being in terrible, terrible drought. Mm-hmm. And it's. When I was a kid, the monsoons started earlier, right? They started back in May and they went all the way through September. But now they really are the end of June, July, August is when they'll come and it's we'll get the afternoon rain heavy, rain intense, and then it's gone. But when the rain is coming in, there is. There's the smell of the rain. Yeah, and it's the soil. I think that what's happening is there's soil microbes that are, that are releasing the smell. There's all sorts of things, but it's just, there's nothing like the smell of the rain. And I've, I've been in different areas, different deserts have their own. Smell, but there's something similar between them, right? If you're in the Chihuahua or the Mojave, like they have their own and it's just the most wonderful thing. There's just nothing like it. And right after the rain, there's so much life that just wakes up. We have mosses that go dormant and then it rains and they wake up and they're, this fairy green just pops of fairy green everywhere. And then a few hours later they're back to the brown. And it just, everything wakes up in a way that that is just very different than the rest of the year. So it's just wonderful. And the insects. And one of the really fun things that we love is that after a rain, a day or so after that is when the winged ants will come out. Oh, so they send out that generation because they need the soft ground to be able to start the next colony, and it's too hard to to dig any other time. So that's when you'll see just these, the conventions, these parties of the wing dance. And you know, some of the termites do that as well. And it's just, Alive with insects and creatures, and it's just a very magical time of year. Mark: And there's all then the dramatic lightning storms that come with the rain too. Yucca: That's right. Yeah. And the clouds, the, the incredible, the thunderheads. Yeah. What is it, CU Cumul. Nimbus, is that what it is? Those ones that just go literally miles into the sky and it's amazing. Yeah, no, Mark: and what I have enjoyed when I've been in the desert Southwest at this time of year is that typically, The rains will break right before sunset. Yes. So you get these spectacular sunsets, just unbelievable kind of blazing through the remnants of the clouds. Mm-hmm. Really Yucca: extraordinary. Yeah. And most the sunsets all year round are beautiful, but as we go deeper into summer, the late summer, early fall is when those sunsets are. I don't know why. I don't know quite what's happening. That's different, but they're the ones where the whole sky is just red and golden and mm-hmm. It's just, and they seem to, to last a little longer. It's, it's quite amazing. Hmm. So enchantment. Yep. So that's what's happening for us. This is a great time of year. Yeah. And it's not too hot yet. Uhhuh, it'll get a, we don't actually get that hot. Really. We're, we're fine in terms of heat, but you know, we're, we'll be in hanging out in the eighties, so Uhhuh. Mark: Yeah. Yeah. I mean, most of the warm days that we get are low nineties, but, You know, some, sometimes when the fog cycle really breaks hard, we'll have days that are, well, we had a, a day that last Yucca: year, you had crazy Mark: 15 last year. That was for about a week we had temperatures that were up mm-hmm. Over 110 every day. And that was, that was amazing. Yeah. So, mid-summer. Yeah. And and the summer solstice. What are the kinds of things that we think of thematically that go along with this time of year? I mean, we've, we've talked about what's happening in nature. Mm-hmm. We still, by the way, our birds still have their mating plumage, which is interesting. It seems a little late to me, but they do, I'm seeing that at our Yucca: feeders. Ours too, as well. Although ours are always, we're a little later. Than you because you warm up so much sooner than we do. Right. So there's still and I, I feed mine meal worms and I see that they're still gobbling up the meal worms as we get later into the summer. They'll kind of leave that alone. But I put out like a little bowl for them to, to and so I assume that they're always doing that when they've got the eggs or the real young mm-hmm. The young birds in the nest. So that makes sense. Yeah. Yeah. Wow. Our hummingbirds are mostly gone though. Ah, there's a few that will hang out in the summer, but they mostly were just a stop for them on their larger journey. Mark: See, we have a number of birds that are actually migratory birds, but they don't migrate where we are because it's so benign. They just like Yucca: it. They're like, they just Mark: hang, you know, we have, we have hummingbirds in the middle of the winter, and they're just like, well, if we went anywhere else, it'd be worse than here. Yucca: So they just hang out. Okay. That's great. Why? I mean, yeah. Speaking of the birds The kiddos and I took a trip just last week down to Carlsbad Caverns, and we woke, we woke up really early in the morning to go watch the bats return. So, the. The park is actually open all night. So we got there at like three 30 or four in the morning instead of watching them leave. And so the bats were all coming home. But then there are cave swallows that found the caverns just a few decades ago. Apparently they weren't there before, so now they've made it their home. And so you switch, the bats go in, and then the swallows come out. Oh. And so they're also migratory, so they'll go down south, farther south. Because I mean, from my perspective, Carlsbad is already pretty south, but I'm talking about, you know, down into South America for that. And then they'll come back up from like, April to October. And they're just incredible creatures as they're swooping around. And when they fly next to, it's like, sounds like a, like the sky, like a crackle as they like zip past you. So that was really fun to get to see them in the like hundreds. So hundreds of bats replaced with hundreds of these swallow. Mark: Wow. That's cool. Yucca: Yeah. So just a plug for everyone. If you have not been to the caverns, it's, it's unbelievable. They're really unbelievable. You can hike down but they also have an elevator so you can get down. So if you are in a wheelchair or have any mobility challenges, like that's really, really accessible. So it's a great experience. Yeah. Now in term we, we were back on, we were on themes though, right? So you often see this wheel of the year as the life cycle of a human right? Mark: I do. And this time would be full adulthood, like mm-hmm. In your thirties you know, maybe into your mid forties, kind of at the height of your powers. And. That doesn't entirely square with my understanding of this holiday actually. Mm-hmm. Thematically, because to me this is the holiday of leisure. Mm-hmm. In the agricultural cycle. That's kind of what it is. At least it was in, in European Times and it, and it is where I am locally, all plant. He did Yucca: all the planting, but it's not time to harvest's been done. Mark: Stuff is growing. Not time to harvest yet. So really what you do is lie in a hammock and drink beer or mojitos and just kind of relax. So it's a time for going to the beach and other sort of leisure kinds of activities. And that's what I most associate with this holiday actually is. Not formal rituals so much as just getting outside and having recreational activities that, that are enjoyable and relaxing. Yucca: Mm. Okay. That's wonderful. Mark: How about you? What are, what are the things that you associate with the time of year? Yucca: Yeah, this is the bugs time of year for us. This is the arthropods are insects and Mya pods and and this is really the, the time of year in our climate where they really are at their. Peak in their height and there's just, oh the wild bees are out and the all kinds of creatures are around. We have, these ones will get a little bit more active later on in the year, but I adore them. We have Carolina Wolf spiders here. Oh. And which are. Wolf spiders, but they are, you know, several inches across. They're, they're big, they're like the sizes of a small little tarantula. And we like to go out on night hikes, and which you have to, of course be. Careful to not step on any animals, but the, the spiders are very shy creatures, right? They don't want to come up and mess with you, but when you shine your light around their eyes, glisten like little, it's a Micah, and they look back at you and so there's just a, a celebration of them and how important they are for our world, they are just so critical. And it's also a time that we do do gifts as well. So we do gifts on both solstice and we're about, when we're recording this, we're about a, you know, a little bit more than a week out. Mm-hmm. So we haven't put it up yet, but we have a bee garland that we do in our house where we've made. Giant bees out of like a cardboard and some of them have clay and we put it around and decorate the house for the summer. And of course lots of sun motifs as well because there's just so much sun right now. And we put that around the house and, you know, hang little, little trinkets and little gifts. And so the kids will probably get some books and, and things that are often insect related or. Cousin insect, you know, cuz spiders and centipedes and those things aren't insects, but they're close cousins. Right. So. Right. Yeah. Mark: Well that sounds really fun and wonderfully seasonal. Yeah. The, the sun symbols are obviously a big part of, you know, what I do with my focus, for example, and my altar has lots of sun symbols on it generally, but it gets a lot more sun symbols on it at this time of year. Yeah. It's really, you know, the rain of the, the sun triumphant at this time of year. This, one of my, one of my least favorite summer solstice traditions is that right around this time of year is when I sunburned my scalp and then realized that it's half season. I need to, I need to not do this. Mm-hmm. You know, it's not February anymore. The sun is not weak. The sun is as about as overhead as it's gonna get, and it's strong. And I need to protect myself from Yes. So that's another thing that happens every year. Mm. Yucca: I enjoy hats. I have some great huge, broad roomed hats. My, my climate is a hat all the time. Climate. Hmm. Because even in the winter it's very, very, very high elevation. But it's cold enough that you need to have a knit hat in the cold half of the year. And then it's just so, there's just so much sun that you've just gotta have something to. Or else you can't see to protect your, your face and neck and, and all of that. Yeah. It's Mark: not elevation. There's so much uv. You really gotta be careful. Yucca: Yeah. Well, you know, when you go to the weather page and it'll tell you the, what's the pollen count and the wind, you know, our UV index is almost always 10 all the time. You just don't even look at it. It's 10. Well, So yeah, you can't leave a, the, you know, a tarp won't last a season out there, Uhhuh, the UV just eats it and it turns into those terrible million little pieces of plastic everywhere, so. Well, are there any rituals that you do either for yourself or with your community around this time of year? Mark: Well, as I said, most of what I want to do with my community at this time of year is to really just kind of hang and. Enjoy one another's company. But there is one ritual that I do every year, which involves my son broom. Mm-hmm. And longtime listeners will have heard me talk about this before. I have a handle, which is a piece of Oak Branch that I gathered in a state park. And on that I have bound long grasses to make a shaggy sort of broom. And I add grasses to it every year. In, in some years, I actually fully replace the grasses. Mm-hmm. I can find enough long grass to cut wherever I am and use that to, to replace the, the, the bristles. And I bind that all up and then I sit it out in the mid-summer sun all day on the day of the solstice. Mm-hmm. And the idea of that is that it's soaking up the, you know, the power of the sun. Mm-hmm. And so long about February, I can wave that thing around the house when it's really dismal and sort of remind myself of the feeling of the sun and the, the energy and the, the warmth and light and all those things that I'm missing in Yucca: February. That's great. Mark: Yeah. It's, it's a nice ritual tool to have. You know, there have been times when, like, I've been working with people that have been really feeling down you know, having a really hard time in their life right then and kind of waving a lot of sun around them, it seems to make them feel better. Nice, Yucca: nice. Yeah. And are the grasses still green for you? No. You have, okay, so you're, you're harvesting. Dry grass then. Yeah, it's Mark: generally wild oats. Mm-hmm. They grow very tall and so, you know, you can cut 'em off and make a nice long broom. This, this marks. Really mayday kind of marks the demarcation between the gold time of the year and the green time of the year. Mm-hmm. That's what I was remembering. Yeah. Yeah. Things are, are starting to gold up and we've had a few little sprinklings of rain, so there's some remnants of green. Unusually so this year especially because we had this giant rain year, right. Last winter. But by and large, the hills have gone golden by this time. Mm-hmm. And so that's the golden time Yucca: of the year. Yeah. I, I really just en enjoy how flipped our climates are because this is one of the only times of year that the grass is green. It's gold most of the year, but right now we've got this pop of green and it's just so, it's just beautiful how. Places are so different, right? We're, yeah, we're experiencing, I mean, we're sharing some experiences together because we're going, you know, what's happening astronomically? You know, that's, we're all experiencing that, but what spring is for you and what spring is for me, we're just in these very different worlds, and yet coming together and sharing in an online space and then going back to our. You know, might as well be different planets sometimes. Mark: Yeah. Well, and of course, I mean, we, I, I just had our Saturday Zoom mixer that we do every Saturday mm-hmm. This morning. And a woman from Argentina was there. Mm-hmm. And of course she's in an entirely different world. Right. You know, it's like it's cold and it's wet and it's dark and you know, all those. Yeah. All those things that we associate with December up here are what's happening for her right now, so. Mm-hmm. Yeah. Yucca: And that as a country has so many different environments. Yeah. Mark: Well, yeah, cuz it's so north south and it's got the Andes, which are so high Yucca: and Right. It's that it's stretched down. It goes, you know, and then you can be in that low, low desert or that high or the, you know, it's, I'm looking at, on the map right now. Yeah. Or Mark: Patagonia, which is this arctic kind of environment. Yeah. It's, mm-hmm. It's everything. I'd love to go Yucca: where there are still folks who speak Welsh. Really? Yes, there is a Welsh community there. And so you can, you'll find people with last names of like Evans and, and things like that. Yeah. So it's, they're the, like the Welsh like cowboys in Patagonia. It's, it's, it's a, it's, it's a great country. It's an amazing, we live in just a wonderful world, just so many different places and, and little gems and, yeah. Mark: Yeah. So, yep. Well, that's kind of part of what we're all about, isn't it? We live in a wonderful world. Me too. It's It's just really cool when you pay attention to it. Yucca: Yeah. I like having the holidays as these touchstones throughout the year. Mm-hmm. Right. Just to kind of come back and think about, you know, what was last year around Solstice and the year before and, and how it's so similar and yet so different this time around. Mm-hmm. Mark: Well, I think I conjecture that that's why the The, the symbol of the spiral was very attractive to prehistoric people. You know, the, the creators of the megalithic passage, burials and all that kind of stuff, because time really is like a spring, you know, you come around to the same point again, but you're, you're removed from it by a year. Mm-hmm. So it just kind of iterates around and around and around. Yeah. Always in a different place and yet in the same place at the same time. Hmm. So what was I gonna do? I know what I was gonna do. I was gonna close with a poem for the season. Ooh, let me Yucca: grab Sure. Mark: This is called Dawn Prayer, whose warm love flows across the land each day stirring life, the world's magic arms yearning up, turning each green leaf to follow whose generous balm upon the skin is love's touch. Ah, heated fingers, soothing. Whose Roar boils water from ocean to sky, drawing sweet from salt, becoming rain, snow river lake whose fervor beat upon us is deadly and yet contemplating cold stars. How we miss it? The golden one. Quotidian center of our days Steady companion soer of treasures. Great and small light bringer life. Quickener, dazzling unbearably bright. Hail. Oh, hail the magnificent sun. Yucca: Thank you. Mark: Hmm. My pleasure. I'm awfully fond of that star. I I would be really bereft without it. Yucca: Yes. Do you? And all of us. Yeah. So, well, this was a great talk and thank you. Mark: Sure. Yeah. Everyone have a wonderful mid-summer and or winter or mid-winter. Mm-hmm. And if you come up with cool ideas for rituals for this time of year, shoot us an email at the wonder podcast cues gmail.com. Let us know what you're doing. We're always interested to hear from our listeners. So thanks so much for listening.
@MoreChrist Episode 98: Paul Kingsnorth & Tom Holland: Myths, Saints, & History, the Bible & Life After Progress https://hedgehogreview.com/issues/the-post-modern-self/articles/the-strange-persistence-of-guilt The Quest for a Spiritual Home Conference with PVK, Jonathan Pageau and John Vervaeke by Estuary Chino May 18 to 21 2023 Link for tickets https://events.eventzilla.net/e/estuary-chino-2023-2138601197 Paul Vander Klay clips channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCX0jIcadtoxELSwehCh5QTg Bridges of Meaning Discord https://discord.gg/J5PmNPmv https://www.meetup.com/sacramento-estuary/ My Substack https://paulvanderklay.substack.com/ Estuary Hub Link https://www.estuaryhub.com/ If you want to schedule a one-on-one conversation check here. https://paulvanderklay.me/2019/08/06/converzations-with-pvk/ There is a video version of this podcast on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/paulvanderklay To listen to this on ITunes https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/paul-vanderklays-podcast/id1394314333 If you need the RSS feed for your podcast player https://paulvanderklay.podbean.com/feed/ All Amazon links here are part of the Amazon Affiliate Program. Amazon pays me a small commission at no additional cost to you if you buy through one of the product links here. This is is one (free to you) way to support my videos. https://paypal.me/paulvanderklay Blockchain backup on Lbry https://odysee.com/@paulvanderklay https://www.patreon.com/paulvanderklay Paul's Church Content at Living Stones Channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh7bdktIALZ9Nq41oVCvW-A To support Paul's work by supporting his church give here. https://tithe.ly/give?c=2160640
Giles and Esther skim the week's papers; from increased ADHD diagnoses and why we don't laugh enough, to the return of Fawlty Towers and the benefits of BeReal. Giles recounts his favourite 70's sitcoms and Esther tries to hold back the laughter when thinking about her children falling over and walking into doors.Get more of The Times and The Sunday Times - visit www.thetimes.co.uk/gilescorenhasnoidea.Producer: Ben Mitchell Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2022.09.14.506830v1?rss=1 Authors: Dilbeck, M. D., Gentry, T. N., Economides, J. R., Horton, J. C. Abstract: PURPOSE: Wearable tracking glasses record eye movements and fixations as ambulatory subjects navigate their environment. We tested the performance of eye tracking glasses under laboratory and real world conditions, to characterize the vergence behavior of normal individuals engaged in their customary daily pursuits. METHODS: To define the accuracy and variability of the eye tracking glasses, 4 subjects fixated with the head stabilized at a series of distances corresponding to vergence demands of: 0.25, 0.50, 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, and 32{degrees}. Then, 10 subjects wore the eye tracking glasses for prolonged periods while carrying out their normal activities. Vergence profiles were compiled for each subject and compared with interpupillary distance. RESULTS: In the laboratory the eye tracking glasses were comparable in accuracy to remote video eye trackers, outputting a mean vergence value within 1{degrees} of demand at all angles except 32{degrees}. In ambulatory subjects the glasses were less accurate, due to tracking interruptions and measurement errors, only partly mitigated by application of data filters. Nonetheless, a useful record of vergence behavior was obtained in every subject. Vergence angle often had a bimodal distribution, reflecting a preponderance of activities at near (mobile phone, computer) or far (driving, walking). Vergence angle was highly correlated with interpupillary distance. CONCLUSIONS: Wearable eye tracking glasses provide a history of vergence angle and the corresponding scene witnessed by ambulatory subjects. They offer insight into the diversity of human ocular motor behavior and may become useful for diagnosis of disorders that affect vergence, such as convergence insufficiency, Parkinson disease, and strabismus. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by PaperPlayer
Talk about being Unstoppable! The Unstoppable Frankie Picasso, host of Mission Unstoppable interviewed Swapna Abraham recently about her first book, titled ‘ She Played in the Dark' , which tells the story of how she came to write over a thousand songs in 1000 Days to become a world record holder in 4 categories. With respect to the above, the following record attempts have been certified as successful by the Golden Book of World Records that clearly understood the output and methodology associated with this challenge and were able to identify and establish a standard for what is called a song, and song production (fundamentally necessary for world record attempts). •Longest quotidian feat of composing, producing and publishing song incessantly (April 08, 2017 - January 02, 2020) •Quotidian feat of composing, producing and publishing multiple songs incessantly for 100 days (March 08, 2019 - June 15, 2019) •Most songs composed, produced and published by an individual in one day (January 01, 2020) •Longest quotidian feat of composing, producing and publishing children's song incessantly [they do not consider the children's song as a regular song, but certainly call it children's song] (April 08, 2017 - January 02, 2020 Swapna Abraham has 21 albums under belt and her music runs the gamut from gospel, country, soul and folk. In addition to singing and songwriting, Swapna is also an actor, mentor, designer, marketing and branding enthusiast, mother and grandmother. She hails from Kerala but now lives in Dubai. Swapna has been recognized for her achievements many times and received the Maestro Award – LAMP-ICONGO Karmaveer Chakra for her contribution to gospel music, in 2019, the Aspire World Award for Passion for Excellence at the 31st Global Women's Empowerment Summit, and in 2022, the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Music (Honoris Causa) by Vinayaka Mission's Research Foundation (Deemed To
My guest is Vishal Tolani, CEO of Dartmouth Brands. He's helped bring multiple watch brands into the world under the Dartmouth umbrella such as Spinnaker, Avi-8 and Earnshaw. As well as playing in the world of brands, he's also deeply embedded in the watch industry as a second-generation manufacturer.Vishal and I talk about what it means to be made in Hong Kong, what keeps him up at night as the custodian of the family business, and how he hopes it will one day live on without him. We discuss what goes into creating that beautiful combination of art and engineering that resides on your wrist, and in a time when (thanks to mobile phones) the idea of timekeeping is more emotional than essential, we discuss the primacy of storytelling and brand-building in order to infuse a product with real heart.We also talk about the positive side-effects of the advancing years, the peace that comes with it, as well as how he finds inspiration in the people all around him. I hope you enjoy this conversation as much as I did.Links:https://www.dartmouthbrands.co.uk/vishaltolani@gmail.comHome of the podcast:Coach & Speaker Profile: www.michaelxcampion.comLinkedIn: @michaelxcampionIG: @michaelxcampion
In this Episode we talk with Amanda from Amanda Quotidian Books. She is an avid reader who has read over 3000+ books and has chronicled that adventure on her BookTube Channel where she takes part in Youtube “book” community where she discusses her readings and gives honest reviews of the books she has read. Her channel has over 4000 subscribers and she is also followed by 900 people on GoodReads. She is currently on pace to read over 100 books a year and uses her social media accounts to detail those accomplishments by giving her thoughts and insights on the books she is currently reading, has read, wants to read, or why she will not read certain books. She is a wonderful fellow “cyborg” and it was my absolute pleasure to sit down and speak with her. If you would like to follow Amanda you can here: https://www.youtube.com/c/AmandaQuotidianBooks https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/7897151-amanda The Weekly Bark is inspired by Ecclesiastes 9:4 where it states “Anyone who is among the living has hope —even a live dog is better off than a dead lion!” So while I am alive I wish to spread positivity to the world and celebrate other people who are doing that as well. Thank you for stopping by and listening, please join us on our socials to engage in the conversation and become part of our online family. For more content and information follow us at: www.theweeklybark.com There I will have more content and links to our socials for exclusive content. If you wish to support the channel merchandise can be purchased here: https://my-store-c8c2eb.creator-spring.com Thank you again and we will see you again next week, Jesse --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jesse-maust/support
Four excerpts from Don DeLillo's Underworld, which I reread during plague lockdown in 2020. 00:00—”Waste” (music by Charles Mingus) 06:00—”An American Sort of Thing” (music by Miles Davis) 10:50—”Quotidian” (music by Ornette Coleman) 17:25—”Denizens” (music by Endless Boogie)
Meet Diane Callahan. In today's episode, Diane shares her love of reading and writing, and how a love of reading at a young age prepared her to be an editor as an adult. Having taken every writing class she could in college she'd later collab with good friends on their books via her company, The Quotidian Writer. We cover topics like favorite books growing up, Walter Tevis books, editing techniques, and how her journey as a YouTuber is going so far. Thanks for listening and enjoy! Connect with Diane on Twitter: @quotidianwriter. Editing Services: QuotidianWriter.com. Theme Song: EMOTION by MuhTeyOh. Follow the show on all social media platforms @josiahsvoicepod. This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. HTTP://anchor.fm/app Listen to this episode at www.newsly.me or download the app on IOS or ANDROID. For a Free 1 Month subscription use my PROMO CODE: J0S1AHV01CE. Enjoy. SHOW NOTES --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In this bonus episode, Diane Callahan aka the Quotidian Writer, asks me about my latest writing projects. SHOW NOTES Connect with Diane on Twitter: @quotidianwriter. Follow the show on all social media platforms @josiahsvoicepod. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Entrevistas con Ariel Nachari, estratega senior de SURA Inversiones, y con Miguel Papic, fundador de Quotidian.
Entrevistas con Ariel Nachari, estratega senior de SURA Inversiones, y con Miguel Papic, fundador de Quotidian.
Sermon from the Rev. Barbara Ballenger for the First Sunday of Advent. Today's readings are: Jeremiah 33:14-16 1 Thessalonians 3:9-13 Luke 21:25-36 Psalm 25:1-9 Readings may be found on LectionaryPage.net: https://www.lectionarypage.net/YearC_RCL/Advent/CA... Let us pray. In our family, we are the relatives that travel home. We have always tended to live several hours away from the family core, and so rather than being the ones that host Thanksgiving or Christmas, we're the ones that drive - in our case to all the way to Northeastern Ohio. Now, when we lived in Rochester, New York, we made the arduous trek through Erie, PA every December - for which we should get a special family medal. When we lived in Baltimore MD, the six hour trip home could sometimes become 12 hours because of the curse of The Pennsylvania Turnpike. And as any of you know when you are traveling with young children on such journeys that are long and boring year after year you search for those signs that will help them to know that the journey is nearly over. Are we there yet? "No, but look, it's the Sapp Brothers Coffee Pot. That means we're near Clearfield, we only have an hour to go." And there it would be rising up out of the mountains of Central Pennsylvania , as a sign that we were almost done with that trip home from Cleveland back to State College where we lived at the time. Now apparently that coffee pot is a landmark from Omaha to Pennsylvania and it will lead you if you follow it to a truck stop. I appreciated it more as a sign that better coffee lay ahead if we were only patient. Regardless, it was a sign of hope on a long car trip home. Signs are essential to the upkeep of hope - especially in the long journey that we're on with God. That's because a big part of the life of faith is waiting - waiting for delivery from exile, waiting for an end to oppression and injustice, waiting for the Messiah to arrive, the Kingdom to Come, waiting for Christ to return. Today's Scriptures are a good example - they acknowledge that longing of God's people. "The days are surely coming, says the Lord, when I will fulfill the promise I made to the house of Israel and the house of Judah," promises Jeremiah. "Night and day we pray most earnestly that we may see you face to face and restore whatever is lacking in your faith," writes Paul to the dear community of the Thessalonians; the first community he founded. "Now when these things begin to take place, stand up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near," Luke's Gospel quotes Jesus as saying, after he enumerates the various things that will happen before God's glory is fully revealed. Advent is a season that relishes waiting - waiting for a coming Christmas that we know has already arrived. Waiting for a second coming of which we know not the time or the place. To help us through, God sends signs that acknowledge our longing. Burning Bushes and 12 plagues. Oil that does not run out. Transfigurations. The Scriptures also offer us prophetic performances and veiled apocalyptic imagery like we have in today's Gospel. And people of faith are notorious for misreading them. God's signs are characteristically inexplicit in their timing, and when made into predictions, they invariably let us down. There is an art to reading God's signs. Now, when my husband Jess and I met in college and began to spend lots of time together, we often found ourselves looking for someplace to eat. We'd leave a class wondering which of the half dozen dining establishments in Kent, Ohio, would we choose that day. Let's follow the signs, Jess would say. A fallen branch on the sidewalk would suggest we go left. A crumpled piece of notebook paper sent us forward. A shadow pointing a certain way would steer us in another direction. Inevitably we'd end up at Wendy's. I would not say that this was God's will. Divine signs don't work like that. Now the Apostle Paul, on the other hand, was very good at reading God's signs. I think he saw them everywhere, especially in the communities of faith that he helped to found. Listen to his delight in the Thessalonian community that he is separated from and longing for: "How can we thank God enough for you in return for all the joy that we feel before our God because of you?" he writes to them. They are the sign that Paul turns to in order to endure the long slog of his work as an apostle. They give him hope as the Body of Christ in action in real time. The Thessalonians are not perfect - he knows that their faith is lacking in places. But that doesn't limit his joy. They are enough for him, because they speak to the presence of Christ among the faithful, even as they await Jesus' coming in glory. Here is the true power of God's signs; of Christ's promises. They answer some of our most persistent questions, though not the one we usually find ourselves asking. More often than not, we cry out with the psalmist, "How long O Lord?" And we think what we want is a day and a time. But the questions that God answers are: Are you still with us, Lord? Will everything be OK? And to those questions God answers: "stand up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near." The Kingdom of God is at hand. Redemption is drawing near. God is with us. This is what God's signs reveal as we journey from the now of God's will to the not yet of God's promises. Because God knows that it hardly helps us to know how much time it will be exactly before our longing ends, when it's the present moment that feels like an eternity and seems so hard to endure. Often when things are very near their completion, time seems to slow down and stand still. I remember this from when I was in labor with my kids, and in that last week before they were born, everything just stopped and the inevitable seemed like it was never going to happen. Waiting for news - good or bad - can feel like this. Keeping vigil at a death can feel like this. And then in an instant everything changes, and the end begins. So we can't really trust our sense of time, and the impatience we find ourselves in because of it, but we can acknowledge our longing for the fullness of God's love to be revealed, for the return of Christ in glory, for the new world coming. And at the same time, we can relish the evidence of it along the way. And very often it is not in the earthquakes or the roaring of the seas that God's presence is signified, as much as it's in communities of faith, like Paul's dear Thessalonians or our faith community here. God's signs abound here. Quotidian maybe, but astonishing to me all the same - the compassionate listening, the waiting by the bedside, the checking in on one another, the sharing at morning prayer, the ability to forgive or to try something new. These too are God's signs. They answer the questions: Are you still with us, Lord? Will everything be OK? And in these signs God answers:" I am here. I am with you. And all will be well." Amen. Permission to podcast/stream music in this service obtained from One License with license #A-701187 and CCLI with license #21234241 and #21234234. All rights reserved. Video, photographs, and graphics by the Church of St. Martin-in-the-Fields. Episcopal Church of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, 8000 St. Martin's Lane, Philadelphia, PA 19118. 215.247.7466. https://www.stmartinec.org
She showed up smoking marlboro lights and talking about a ribbon store nearby. This was on west 38 street, where I'd rented, for 250 dollars, a studio for the recording sesh. My voice was ragged, frayed, like late period Dylan, on account of a cold I acquired in Greenpoint, at a play, and three classes a day on the Metamorphosis: I encouraged my students to notice patterns, the transformations within transformations, the repetition of the word deliverance--they drew dung-beetle dicks on the whiteboard, and, lost myself in the mutiny, I told them Gregor Samsa's sister was Greta Thunberg. Lauren and I had been waiting for her on a bench by a clothing store, which induced Lauren to tell me about Reformation, she called it slutty Anne Boleyn, but before the bench we'd gone to CVS to buy lauren an android charger and a big bag of ricolas for my ruined larynx. Oh and before the CVS we'd gotten coffee and croissants and salad from the Quotidian Pain. There were drilling, burrowing sounds coming from somewhere adjacent to quotidian pain, and so I couldn't talk at all, couldn't even try to talk over them, so I tried to read about Karl Ove, I mean read his book, the coat sliding off a hanger, his dad's fingerprints, dead, on a teapot, and she said she'd done the reading, our guest---Dasha--she said she was a speed reader; but, after I'd sent her the PDF and the page numbers--labeled DASHA START HERE on page 417, in my stunted hieroglyphic--and after I'd reminded her of where to meet, at Gotham Studios on w 38st, she'd said that today's section--the final part of book 1--was a “a bit of a bore.” But then she was in the thrum of glamor, premieres and screenings and writers rooms, and so perhaps she couldn't attend to the subtleties or whatever of the text, which was fine with me, since it was coup just to get her here, just to watch her walk up to us on west 38 st and to listen to her tell us about ribbons and the nearest brasserie, what was the difference anyway between a bistro and a brasserie, and I knew the episode would be a tedious success when, once we got recording, on the 10th floor, she launched into her day: rotten bananas, red smoothies, Equinox. There was perhaps even a kind of sleepy glamour to her mundanity, and her itemization (such as it was) almost redeemed my sandblasted tonsils and the wallet I'd lost, for a spell, at Metrograph, which I would tell her about, later, at Match 86, after a cucumber martini; redeemed Lauren's spasming shoulder and migraines, too. Dasha redeemed most of literature herself-- “all books are basically good,” she said. Then we took a cab in the rain to the bisto or was it a brasserie and we ate pate and tartare and escargot, doused in parsley sauce, and outside, after, we smoked American Spirit Yellows. I can hardly speak, there's nothing more to say, though, I think. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ourstrugglepod/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ourstrugglepod/support
Lucia Gagliardone is Vermont-born, Washington DC based choreographer and dance artist. In her work, she deals with themes of healing and community, relationships with the earth and water, disintegration and wholeness, and various iterations of the self. Her work and performance are grounded in modern dance and improvisation, with a fascination for quotidian life as a foundation for choreography. Lucia is interested in storytelling and sees creating dance as a process of empathy. www.luciagagliardone.com Instagram: @lucia.gagliardone.dance Lucia's upcoming work, The Hollow, is being premiered both virtually and live in Washington DC in November. On November 5th at 8pm, The Hollow will be presented virtually as part of Coalescence, a visual and performing arts showing. On November 14th at 3 pm, a full length, live version of The Hollow will premiere as part of a pop-up show in a DC park, also produced and created by Lucia. Finally, on November 20th at 7 pm in Fairfax, VA, The Hollow will be performed as part of Transformations, produced by DanceArtTheater. All information and links to join can be found using the link in Lucia's instagram bio. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/beth-elliott/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/beth-elliott/support
Our homes are not places to be absent from the conviction of the Holy Spirit. Rather, if we allow the Holy Spirit to convict us and lead us and teach us in our own home we create the ease of hearing this conviction in our daily life. Matthew 6:9-13 Pray then like this: “Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name. 10 Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. 11 Give us this day our daily bread, 12 and forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. 13 And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. “He who began a good work in you, will carry it through…” Philippians 1:6 Church Plant | NWLAChurch.com Podcast | CarryUsThrough.co Church Plant Instagram | @NWLAChurch Podcast Instagram | @CarryUsThroughCo Church Help & Resource Instagram | @PhygitalMission Facebook | @NewWaveChurch Twitter | @urbanchurch Host: Instagram | @GabrielMenchaca_ GabrielMenchaca.com Gabriel & Vanessa Menchaca are Christ-centered, community driven church planters focused on facilitating healthy families and healthy Churches. Through discipleship, edification, encouragement and real world application of scripture into everyday life.
Francis Frangipane the author of the book "the three battlegrounds" said : “You will remember that the location where Jesus was crucified was called “Golgotha,” which meant “ place of the skull.” …the first field of conflict where we must learn warfare is the battle ground of the mind; i.e., the “place of the skull.” For the territory of the uncrucified thought-life is the beachhead of satanic assault in our lives. …We must be crucified in the place of the skull. We must be renewed in the spirit of our minds!” Ephesians 4:17-24 17 This I say, therefore, and testify in the Lord, that you should no longer walk as the rest of[d] the Gentiles walk, in the futility of their mind, 18 having their understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God, because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart; 19 who, being past feeling, have given themselves over to lewdness, to work all uncleanness with greediness. 20 But you have not so learned Christ, 21 if indeed you have heard Him and have been taught by Him, as the truth is in Jesus: 22 that you put off, concerning your former conduct, the old man which grows corrupt according to the deceitful lusts, 23 and be renewed in the spirit of your mind, 24 and that you put on the new man which was created according to God, in true righteousness and holiness. There is a definite connection that I don't have to stretch far to understand between belief and living as such. You live the way you believe. It is in the decisions we make everyday that dictate us living in victory or defeat. #christianliving #christianity #churchplantinla #nwlachurch #newwavela #losangeles #christiansinlosangeles “He who began a good work in you, will carry it through…” Philippians 1:6 Church Plant | NWLAChurch.com Podcast | CarryUsThrough.co Church Plant Instagram | @NWLAChurch Podcast Instagram | @CarryUsThroughCo Church Help & Resource Instagram | @PhygitalMission Facebook | @NewWaveChurch Twitter | @urbanchurch Host: Instagram | @GabrielMenchaca_ GabrielMenchaca.com Gabriel & Vanessa Menchaca are Christ-centered, community driven church planters focused on facilitating healthy families and healthy Churches. Through discipleship, edification, encouragement and real world application of scripture into everyday life.
We are faced daily with questions concerning our positions or stances on many different issues. How are we supposed to act justly? When everyone around is doing all they can to cheat? How am I supposed to be kind when I get so angry? And they're angry at me? How am I supposed to be humble when everyone is so prideful around us? When humility is taken as inability or weakness? Matthew 6:9-13 Pray then like this: “Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name. 10 Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. 11 Give us this day our daily bread, 12 and forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. 13 And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. John 6:32-35 32 Jesus then said to them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, it was not Moses who gave you the bread from heaven, but my Father gives you the true bread from heaven. 33 For the bread of God is he who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.” 34 They said to him, “Sir, give us this bread always.” 35 Jesus said to them, “I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in me shall never thirst Micah 6:6-7 MSG How can I stand up before God and show proper respect to the high God? Should I bring an armload of offerings topped off with yearling calves? Would God be impressed with thousands of rams, with buckets and barrels of olive oil? Would he be moved if I sacrificed my firstborn child, my precious baby, to cancel my sin? MSG Micah 6:8 But he's already made it plain how to live, what to do, what God is looking for in men and women. It's quite simple: Do what is fair and just to your neighbor, be compassionate and loyal in your love, And don't take yourself too seriously— take God seriously. “He who began a good work in you, will carry it through…” Philippians 1:6 Church Plant | NWLAChurch.com Podcast | CarryUsThrough.co Church Plant Instagram | @NWLAChurch Podcast Instagram | @CarryUsThroughCo Church Help & Resource Instagram | @PhygitalMission Facebook | @NewWaveChurch Twitter | @urbanchurch Host: Instagram | @GabrielMenchaca_ GabrielMenchaca.com Gabriel & Vanessa Menchaca are Christ-centered, community driven church planters focused on facilitating healthy families and healthy Churches. Through discipleship, edification, encouragement and real world application of scripture into everyday life.
Shul, (a Tibetan word for ‘track', meaning "a mark that remains after that which made it has passed by”) sees artists Martina O'Brien and Christine Mackey respond specifically to Co. Tipperary, to sites/areas where humans have left our mark on, or in, the landscape.SHUL opens Friday 3rd September. The gallery is open 10-5pm Monday to SaturdayIn this episode, Martina O'Brien & Christine Mackey chat about their work for this residency and exhibition and the wealth of material, experience and inspiration gained throughout their Arts Council funded residency here at STAC. More Info:South Tipperary Arts Centre is delighted to present our much anticipated 2021 residency project, supported by Arts Council of Ireland. Shul, (aTibetan word for ‘track', meaning "a mark that remains after that which made it has passed by”) sees artists Martina O'Brien and Christine Mackey respond specifically to Co. Tipperary, to sites/areas where humans have left our mark on, or in, the landscape. Martina O'Brien's new body of work looks to explore the geological legacy of the county. Deemed to be Ireland's most illustrious and prolific mineral locality, the artworks consider the site - specific chronologies of deep-time kept by its stone along with its complex histories of extractivism. Mining took place intermittently at Silvermines for over 1000 years, from the 9th century until 1993 and evidence of this chequered past is still visible in the district including its 19th century engine houses and their close proximity to the remains of modern processing plants, waste heaps and open pits. Realised through film and installation, the artworks also look to examine the ubiquitous presence of rocks in Romantic poetry, and how these sublime descriptions of the earth's material and early environmental discourse presented the earth in its otherness and its nonhuman aspect.Collect, save, and distribute are key activities that stem from Christine Mackey's on-going interest in exploring biological matter. To open this wide and ongoing discussion around the vulnerability of local habitats and their flora and fauna, Mackey devised on-line the distribution of pollinator friendly seed mix ‘Pollinating Pastures'. This has led her journeying in the footsteps of ecologists – retracing hand-drawn routes, site descriptions and recorded sightings of specific plants that were mapped in Tipperary in 1991 for An Foras Forbartha. This alternative way of visiting multiple sites and locations led by the direction of this material whilst mapping the unfolding of a land and its inhabitants has led to a new body of research material for exhibition encompassing drawings, photographs and sound recordings with objects. Martina O'Brien is a Visual Artist and UCD Parity Studio's Irish Centre for Research in Applied Geosciences Artist in Residence (2020/21). Her practice explores links between people, nature and technology, bound by an interest in the earth sciences and practices of divination. Recent solo exhibitions include Quotidian, Illuminations, NUI Maynooth (2019/20) and At Some Distance in the Direction Indicated, Butler Gallery (2018). Recent group shows include New Era, Solstice Arts Centre (2020); Datami Resonance Festival, Ispra, Italy and BOZAR, Centre for Fine Arts, Brussels, (2019/20); and Tactical Magic, TULCA (2019). Recent awards include Arts Council Visual Arts Bursary awards (2021/19). Christine Mackey develops long-term projects that attend to the complexity of plant matter and local habitats, which embody notions of care and cultivation through a range of scio-environmental contexts, collaborations and mediums. In 2018, She was awarded a Fulbright scholarship pursuing independent research across educational institutions and residency programmes. On-going projects include ‘The Potting Shed' (2013 -) ArtLink, Donegal, which opened up a new social space inside a defunct military environment; addressing pressing environmental issues in relation to the geopolitical control of seeds was made evident in ‘Seed Matter' (2010-) devised as a series of exhibitions and a publication, and ‘The Long Hedge' (2018-) site-specific seed collection with future works currently in development funded by the Arts Council bursary award. To contact the podcast : southtippartspodcast@gmail.comThanks for listening :)
With all the new homes under construction in my development, it's hard not to look back through my poetry books and pluck out this little gem to share with you all this week. It's a silly little ode written when I moved into a house I'd bought many years ago, full of optimism as a homeowner after years of renting a place. Hey everyone, this is where I remind you that this podcast can't continue forever without your support! Pick up one of my poetry books, tell a friend about the podcast, the usual rate and review stuff. Links to purchase all my books (poetry and otherwise, if you're so inclined) can be found at my site: https://LefthandRob.net There's also a link there to some Social Justice causes that could use your money to keep doing their good work. To my long-time listeners, thanks for sticking around! For all the new folks, welcome!
Abdu Ali is a musician, writer, cultural worker, and artist. Blending punk, jazz, Baltimore club music, and rap. Their works explore ideas of race, gender, sexuality, and liberation. They received a 2018 Ruby Artist Grant and a 2019 Best Artist Award by the LGBTQ Commission of Baltimore City. Tschabalala Self is a Harlem-born visual artist. Her work concerns the emotional, physical and psychological impact of the Black female body as icon. Her solo exhibitions include: By My Self, at Galerie Eva Presenhuber, and Cotton Mouth, on view at the Baltimore Museum of Art. Self's work is included in the collections of The Art Institute of Chicago, The Hammer Museum, and The Studio Museum in Harlem, among others.
Cynthia Cruz introduces poems that mingle “the everyday with the mystical, the unreasonable,” the poems' meaning and beauty transcending the words themselves. Cruz considers the urgency of the quotidian in Denis Johnson’s “The Monk’s Insomnia,” the magical life a poem can carry within itself in Jon Anderson’s “Fox,” and negation as a place of beginning in Orlando White’s “Ats'íísts'in.” To close, Cruz reads “Hotel Letters,” a poem from a forthcoming collection. Listen to the full recordings of Johnson, Anderson, and White reading for the Poetry Center on Voca:Denis Johnson (1993)Jon Anderson (1978)Orlando White, in a reading celebrating the anthology Sing: Poetry from the Indigenous Americas (2011)
Insights on the Parshas HaShavua from one of the United States most important Jewish educators. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. This podcast is powered by JewishPodcasts.org. Start your own podcast today and share your content with the world. Click jewishpodcasts.fm/signup to get started.
Insights on the Parshas HaShavua from one of the United States most important Jewish educators. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Timely messages on the weekly Torah portion or upcoming Jewish holidays.
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for October 19, 2020 is: quotidian kwoh-TID-ee-un adjective 1 : occurring every day 2 a : belonging to each day : everyday b : commonplace, ordinary Examples: "Disability technology can be so quotidian that nondisabled users don't even notice. GPS and spell-check, so ubiquitous for so many people, are technologies that assist me with dyslexia." — David M. Perry, The New York Times, 20 July 2020 "Normally an outgoing person, I was accustomed to frequent study sessions, movie nights and other quotidian experiences with my friends…." — Elaine Godwin, The Flat Hat (The College of William and Mary), 11 Aug. 2020 Did you know? In William Shakespeare's play As You Like It, the character Rosalind observes that Orlando, who has been running about in the woods carving her name on trees and hanging love poems on branches, "seems to have the quotidian of love upon him." The Bard's use doesn't make it clear that quotidian derives from a Latin word that means "every day." But as odd as it may seem, his use of quotidian is just a short semantic step away from the "daily" adjective sense. Some fevers occur intermittently—sometimes daily. The phrase "quotidian fever" and the noun quotidian have long been used for such recurring maladies. Poor Orlando is simply afflicted with such a "fever" of love.
"it's like mountain flowers in the spring"
In episode 6 of KONTEXT, I am in conversation with Chelsea Sia. We speak across Cambridge and Singapore about Chelsea's lens of ‘Quotidian life and its Value' in a place with a strikingly decreasing deathscape. Chelsea is also an Architecture and Urban Design at The University of Cambridge, and takes us through her specific site of research in Bhukit Brown, the last existing graveyard in Singapore. A detailed episode exploring themes of landscape, death space, zoning and urban development in the trajectory of newness, emblematic of Singapore. For more on Singapore and Chelsea Sia check the instagram handle: @ploopypoopy If you have any comments or are interested in getting involved in KONTEXT, visit: https://khensanideklerk.com/KONTEXT
Can technology and nature go hand in hand, can we use technology to embrace nature? If so, how? Technobiophilia is a new term coined by writer and researcher Sue Thomas. We speak with her about her book of the same name and also about Nature, Wellbeing in the Digital Age. Quotidian use of our device interaction throws up the most surprising benefits it seems, who would have thought that Grand Theft Auto or FarmVille would give us a potential escape route after work into nature, or how nature found its way into our metaphorical library to be an unspoken lexicon for cyberspace terminology. When we use our devices we step into another world, another geography even. Allowing ourselves the grace to embrace technology could provide a transition or an accessible portal for us to enter into the natural world. We talk webcams, Blue Mind, AVs in healthcare, screen savers, the geography of cyberspace and environmental psychology. An interesting and thought-provoking listen to anyone working with nature in their practice, from urban planning to architecture and interior design.
Jeremy Bowen is a man who has spent most of his professional life in the company of crisis. As the BBC’s Middle East Editor he has reported from more than 90 countries and conflicts including Iraq, Bosnia, Kosovo and Lebanon. In this first episode, Jeremy talks frankly about his addiction to danger – how and why he repeatedly put his life at risk in pursuit of a story. And he details how that addiction turned to deep anxiety and grief when his friend and fixer Abed Takkoush was killed while working alongside him. Jeremy talks openly about mental health, and his good and bad experiences with counselling. And how, ultimately, he conquered his demons, only to face down an altogether different challenge when he was diagnosed with bowel cancer. Throughout the episode Jeremy reveals the tools he’s relied on most to manage those moments of crisis. A revealing and thought-provoking conversation to kick off the series. Jeremy's Crisis Cures: 1. Quotidian, humdrum things: ‘I was working in Damascus, the war was going on, you can hear the war through the window, you could see the smoke rising from the suburbs…but it was quite nice putting an edited story together about the Syrian war with the sound of the washing machine in the background.’ 2. Exercise: ‘The natural anti-depressant. In Sarajevo I used to take a skipping rope, I used to skip in the stairwell of the hotel. In Baghdad I would jog around the streets – they thought I was insane.’ 3. Old World War II movies: ‘Often John Mills is involved in some way, and Jack Hawkins. I find those quite reassuring to leave on in the background. Maybe even past crises…those reminders that you do get out of them in the end.’ Links: Twitter: https://twitter.com/BowenBBC Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jeremy.bowen Bowel Cancer UK: https://www.bowelcanceruk.org.uk/ Look UK: https://www.look-uk.org/ Episode Notes: I’ve known Jeremy for about 15 years but this was, as is the nature of us blokes, the most intense conversation we’ve ever had. The utter authenticity of Jeremy’s storytelling was inspiring. For me, the key insights came when we discussed how, having been a crisis volunteer, he suddenly found himself to be a conscript. Facing the possibility of death – not from a sniper’s bullet (which he had narrowly avoided in Sarajevo) but from bowel cancer. His approach to getting through that challenge was clearly influenced by what he’d witnessed so frequently as a reporter. One of Jeremy’s great skills as a broadcaster is to explain how the terrible things we are witnessing on TV are happening to people who, not that long before, were living lives similar to our own. Jeremy has spent more time than most with those families. “I think you can see people who are sometimes better able to get through crisis than others,” he said. “To survive in a war zone you’ve got to do a lot of small things to get through each day. Don’t get overwhelmed by the big picture – that you’re in a horrendous situation. Chip away at the problem.” An analysis that echoed later in the conversation when we turned to his cancer. “You’ve got to do one little thing at a time. Get through the day, get through tomorrow and then have a horizon for when things will be better. In my case – get out of hospital, get through the chemotherapy, then the first scan and the next scan.” Just. Keep. Going. As Jeremy himself said, sometimes clichés are clichés for a bloody good reason. Music: Allies by Some Velvet Morning - www.somevelvetmorning.co.uk
Mein heutiger Gast ist Isabella. Isabella ist Lehrerin aus Niedersachsen und berichtet in dieser Folge über die aktuelle Lage als Lehrkraft. Ihr findet Isa bei Instagram unter isabella.pieczurczyk Und ihr zweiter Account ist isabella.pieczurczyk.art UNBEDINGT!!! anschauen :) Danke für deine Zeit, Isa
Welcome back. Die Pacy ist wieder zurück. _________________________ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
Eigentlich wollt ich pausieren, aber mir lag doch noch was auf dem Herzen. #stayathome _________________________ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
Kein Aprilscherz -> Kontaktsperre wird ERSTMAL bis zum 19. April 2020 verlängert. _________________________ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
Ein Tag Pause war auch mal gut. #wirbleibenzuHause gilt immer noch _________________________ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
Es ist nicht immer alles rosarot. _________________________ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
Einfach drauf losgequatscht. Link: https://www.skillshare.com/home _________________________ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
Heute zu Gast meine liebste Anni. Die Folge ist vor ein paar Minuten spontan beim Spazieren gehen entstanden. Anni und ich geben euch ein paar Tipps, wie ihr die momentane Zeit rumkriegen könnt. Viel Spaß beim Anhören und vielen lieben Dank Anni!! Weiterbildung: https://www.udemy.com https://www.coursera.org https://www.oncampus.de 12 Tipps ehrenamtlich engagieren: https://sz-magazin.sueddeutsche.de/leben-und-gesellschaft/www.sz-magazin.de/leben-und-gesellschaft/corona-helfen-schutzmasken-88538 _____ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
Heute zu Gast die liebe Lara, live aus Melbourne-Australien. Wir haben gestern einfach mal zusammen gezoomt und das ganze Gespräch aufgenommen. Wie geht’s ihr am anderen Ende der Welt? Bleibt Sie dort, kommt Sie zurück? Gibt es einen Premierminister oder wer regelt eigentlich alles in Australien? Kann ich mich auch mit mir selbst beschäftigen? Wie sieht es eigentlich mit der Plant Based Ernährung während Corona aus? Fragen über Fragen. Viel Spaß beim Anhören und vielen lieben Dank Lara!! PS: Sorry für die Audio-Qualität aber die Internetverbindung ist momentan nicht so Deutschlands Stärke :D _____ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
Heute zu Gast Gesundheits- und Krankenpflegerin Maren aus Niedersachsen. Wir sprechen ein wenig über die momentane Situation, über Raucher*Innen und appellieren auch nochmal an alle: #stayhome Danke Maren für deine Zeit :) _____ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
A sermon by Russ Dean with an epilogue by Amy Jacks Dean at Park Road Baptist Church in Charlotte, NC.
Montag - 15h in Berlin Mitte. Wer interessiert sich eigentlich noch für die Wettervorhersage? _____ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
Sonntag - 12:30h in Berlin. Wir bleiben zu Hause Leute :) _____ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
quo | ti | di | a n - täglich Ab heute täglich um 18:30 Uhr ein kurzes Lebenszeichen von mir. Die Folge nochmal beim Spazieren gehen zukünftige aber dann überwiegend von der Couch mit Fenster auf. Ganz bald auch mit Interviewpartner*Innen :) Seid gespannt und vor allem bleibt gesund. _____ Ihr findet mich auf Instagram unter Pacy.derPodcast Auf meiner Website www.pacyderpodcast.de Per Mail info@pacyderpodcast.de Wenn es euch gefällt, abonniert mich auf Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Podimo und Deezer. So bleibt ihr immer auf dem neusten Stand.
ผมได้เข้าเรียนคอร์สพัฒนาผู้นำมาครับ ชื่อ Leadership Communication ผู้สอนเป็นอาจารย์ Professor มาจาก Berkeley Executive Coaching Institute ของ UC Berkeley ต้องบอกว่าเป็นหนึ่งในคอร์สที่ดีที่สุดที่ผมได้เรียนมาเลย ใน EP นี้ผมเอาเกร็ดเล็กๆแต่ผลลัพธ์ไม่เล็กมาแบ่งผันให้ฟัง คือเรื่องการทำ Quotidian Meeting กับทีมงานครับ
Working out is hard, especially when sweaters come on. Stay strong everybody! 6 pack abs may be even cooler than stellar GRE! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/grevocab/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/grevocab/support
Our July artist-in-residence was poet Will Rogers. We sat down to discuss the themes from his book Seeking & Finding, Holding on / Letting Go and it led us to discuss things like art, permission, social justice and finding the joy in everyday things even when it's difficult to do so. Hosts: Albert Kong, Christina Tran, Aranea Push, Will Rogers Notes: Adrienne Maree Brown - Pleasure Activism Naomi Shihab Nye - Gate A4 (We say A10 in the podcast - woops!) Music: Fading Liftoff by Brian Poucher Edited by: Aranea Push
Joining us for this episode is the incredibly fun and wonderful comedian Amber Falter. The Knives are visited by the demonic presence of Quo’Toolhaz the Quotidian. The Squid and the Shush work with their new friend Meatball to follow a tip from Amansio the Deals Broker on how to kidnap an important Iruvian noblewoman toContinue reading →
Series 2 of the Good Words Podcast kicks off with this episode about "QUOTIDIAN." Host Lynn Hickernell explains the word's two related meanings, with the help of an excerpt from James Boswell's journal regarding Dr. Samuel Johnson, and also poems by Emily Dickinson and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Also featuring, "GET IT?!?!?" and the song, "Toothbrush Dance." The Good Words Podcast is proud to be a part of Kids Listen! Find out more at www.kidslisten.org. Complete show notes for this episode are available at https://www.patreon.com/posts/24934966
Sitting down with Elliot this week is actress, model, and former basketball stand-out, Tatiana Ortiz. They discuss her upcoming films "White Trash Ninja" and "Quotidian", as well as her journey from sports to performance, the competitive spirit, strip clubs, Jack Daniels, and Shemar Moore. This is a fun one, folks.Tatiana Ortiz:https://www.instagram.com/ok_tatiana_1/https://twitter.com/one_luckyleftyCheers to You:https://artfinixstudios.com/cheers-to-you/https://www.instagram.com/elliotlerner/https://www.instagram.com/cheerstoyoupodcast/Artfinix Studios:https://artfinixstudios.com/https://artfinixstudios.com/artfinix-podcasts/https://www.facebook.com/ArtfinixStudios/https://www.instagram.com/artfinixstudios/https://www.instagram.com/artfinixpodcasts/Theme:"Foxtrot" by Kozak and the PoetsLogo designed by Baitul Javid
MORNING ROUTINE LIFE-HACK #156: Daily Mentoring with Trevor Crane on GreatnessQuest.com SUMMARY Here’s a little morning routine, and LIKE HACK, I think you’re going to love. I’ve been testing it out now for over two weeks and I love it. It’s improved my happiness my productivity my profitability and I’m finding new insights inside myself that have been profound... CHALLENGE: Test this out for yourself and let me know how it works for you! GET THE APP: Text: TREVOR To: 36260 #greatnessquest #trevorcrane #unstoppable #idealbusiness #ideallife
Somewhere on remote and little visited world called Yulelog, it’s Christmas. Every. Single. Day. Hence, it’s the number one festive destination in the galaxy, or at least that’s what Doctor WHeasel claims. Will this year be a merry time for Time-Weasel and Goose alike, or will it be a repeat of last year’s near cosmic disaster? Season 2 Finalé! First broadcast Dec 2017
Episode 16 begins with a loss. I recorded the episode originally, had an amazing moment of thoughtfulness and clarity and then lost almost the entire episode. Re-recording it was an experience in thoughtfulness without overpreparation. The books that are in conversation in this episode are extraordinary and well worth their reading. Also, surprise children's book moment! I'm working on getting audio transcripts available, and will get the link up as soon as it's ready. For links and more information go to www.twitter.com/potentcastpod If you like the work and would like to support me, please visit ko-fi.com/jonesey Thanks for listening!
Christina Bieber Lake leads Alexis Neal and Victoria Reynolds Farmer in a discussion of Kathleen Norris' The Quotidian Mysteries: Laundry, Liturgy and Women's Work.
Scripture: Judges 6, What is the source of our security, worth, and identity? How can we relate to Gideon & his struggles?
Fear. A baseline for many. That timeless of motivators; back and forth. Such thins line, though, as fear continually masquerades as hate (and "phobia"). Hamed Sinno of the band Mashrou' Leila has been banned, labeled, censored, cursed, followed, chased, reviled, revered, applauded, lauded, targeted and blamed; yet, never silenced. Fearless. Well, maybe a fear or two has crept (and crawled) in along the way. No one is immune, entirely.
Etymology From Anglo-Norman cotidian, cotidien, Middle French cotidian, cotidien, and their source, Latin cottīdiānus, quōtīdiānus (“happening every day”), from adverb cottīdiē, quōtīdiē (“every day, daily”), from an unattested adjective derived from quot (“how many”) + locative form of diēs (“day”). Pronunciation[edit] (UK) IPA(key): /kwəˈtɪdɪən/ (US) IPA(key): /kwɵˈtɪdɪən/
Episode 246: Quotidian moments. Succulents in the morning light, ballpoint series, drawing family members, searching for creative community, and Page by Paige, a fantastic graphic novel about a young, coming-of-age, artist.
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Welcome to Episode 21: Knitting supports Cancer Recovery and other Health IssuesBrainy part starts:24:05. Behind the Redwood Curtain (Trillium) Starts: 33:35 What We're Learning from Our Knitting (and Crochet): Catherine is finishing up the Fantasy Red Cardi designed by Katherine Foster. She's also made two hats as part of the North Coast Knittery's Hats for the Homeless Campaign. The pattern is The Tyson Hat by Robyn Devine and the yarn is Naturally Nazareth.by Kraemer Yarns. Catherine is well along on the Failynn Fox Cowl by Heidi May who goes by the Velvet acorn. She is using Lion Brand Wool Ease Thick and Quick in pumpkin for it Margaret is continuing her exploration of cotton sock yarns. This week she talks about Cascade Fixation using the Fixation Ankle Sock pattern by Dawn Friske or Knitamazoo. Margaret also re-crocheted the Quotidian or Flapper Bucket Hat by the Stitch Diva to make it just a little larger to accommodate her Mom's bun. The Brainy Part: Knitting to Support Cancer Recovery Catherine introduces the Knit for Life Program started by Tanya Pariequz. She also talks about Team Survivor Northwest. Behind the Redwood Curtain: Trillium Margaret talks about the beautiful little trillium that bloom in the spring at the base of the redwood trees. Knitting Tip Margaret shares Edie Eckman's tip in Connect the Shapes Crochet Motifs about using the principle of the Golden Mean in choosing a pleasing proportion of colors in a multi-color project.
We met academic Doctor Who writer Paul Booth at Chicago TARDIS 2014, and against his better judgement he agreed to sit down with us for an hour or so for a conversation about the intersection between Doctor Who fandom and the show's production team. What are some of the defining characteristics of Doctor Who fandom? What is (and should be) the relationship between the show and its fans? How can we reconcile liking something that we find problematic in many ways? All this and Paul gives us a somewhat controversial choice for his personal favorite Doctor Who episode. (Hint: It's a Pertwee.) Main Topic: Paul Booth interview. What episode number is this? Introducing Paul at Chicago TARDIS. History begins. No spoilers for Greatest Show in the Galaxy. You can swear on this podcast. Fandom as an entity in Doctor Who. A history of science fiction fandom. Quotidian. Stereotypes of fandom. Billie Piper calls David Tennant for help in understanding science fiction. Has Doctor Who done something new to shake the "geek" crowd? "No consequences." The middle space between fanon and canon. Series 6B. "The Doctor Who Mafia." Sexist/Racist Moffat? Clara in Series 8: a feminist portrayal? Taking off the academic hat. "If I like it it's good writing." The ultimate empty threat. The popularity of 70s Who. The popularity of Who varies inversely with the level of challenge it presents. The avant-garde 60s Who credit sequence. "Doctor OHO." Red Herrings in Who. Precision in the definite article. Pansexual vs. Polyamorous. Quotidian TV. Paul doesn't have a Doctor. Misconceptions of Hartnell. Paul's Favorite Episode: "Day of the Doctor." One day we'll do a Weeping Angels Special. Shipping Wendy/Frazer in real life. Nyssa in Big Finish vs. on TV. Paul: Important that Night of the Doctor wasn't on TV. Wrapping up. The Likely Lads mention Doctor Who in 1964. You can find Paul's twitter here. And his book: Fan Phenomena: Doctor Who (Intellect Press) is here. Find us on iTunes! Or Facebook! We love email (oispacemanpodcast@gmail.com)! And all our episodes are on oispaceman.libsyn.com. Daniel's Tumblr Twitter Shana's Tumblr Twitter
We review art and create our own concept piece, we reveal the greatest slasher film of all time, and learn how a gun made it through airport security!
Gail Ricciuti presented this sermon as a part of the Sunday worship service at the 2012 EEWC-Christian Feminism Today Gathering in Indianapolis, Indiana. Rev. Ricciuti is associate professor of homiletics at Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School in Rochester, New York, where she has taught for the past 13 years. Before that, she served as a Presbyterian pastor for 25 years. Her articles and reviews have been published in Christian Feminism Today, and she serves on the EEWC Council as Northeast representative.
This week at our Community Gathering for Worship we welcomed Austin Fischer, the first of 4 outstanding, graduating student preachers participating this week in the inaugural "Senior Preaching Week" at Truett. The title for Austin's sermon is: "Quotidian" and is drawn from Matthew 3:13, Mark 15:22-24 and John 20:1.
This week at our Community Gathering for Worship we welcomed Austin Fischer, the first of 4 outstanding, graduating student preachers participating this week in the inaugural "Senior Preaching Week" at Truett. The title for Austin's sermon is: "Quotidian" and is drawn from Matthew 3:13, Mark 15:22-24 and John 20:1.
Notes to our producers: I don’t know if I am going to get through this show without crying. . . thinking about 9-11 and the ways people use words in our times of greatest calamity is so moving to me—how the … Continue reading → The post THE EPIC QUOTIDIAN: NOTES OF 9-11—LOVE CALLING first appeared on Dr. Barbara Mossberg » Poetry Slowdown.