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Building upon the triumph of their inaugural JIU Asia last year, they've returned with an even grander vision. Anticipate a showcase of new and thrilling variants, vintages, and hidden gems waiting to be discovered. In this episode, we sat down with the organizer, Keith Nakamura who introduced Jiu Asia, the groundbreaking event celebrating the diverse world of Asian alcohols. Join us as we explore the unique flavors, traditions, and innovations behind this one-of-a-kind festival that brings together enthusiasts and experts from across the globe. Discover the stories behind the spirits and the vision of the organizers who are reshaping the way we experience Asian alcohol. Don't miss this deep dive into the inaugural event that's set to change the landscape of the alcohol industry in Asia! Get your tickets to this extravaganza here: https://jiuasia.com/Rayson/
As technology and customer expectations change, fintechs must adapt and pivot to meet the needs of the community banks they work with. Whatever community banks are looking for—streamlining data collection, cutting down operation costs, etc.—there should be a fintech stepping up to provide a solution. But that means they must know exactly what the community bank customer desires. “The majority of the conversations that I am having on this topic is a function of helping that fintech founder connect the products, which are usually amazing, to real, tangible, deep balance sheet and P&L and outcomes,” says Allan Rayson, founder and CEO of Finov8r Consulting. So what do those fintechs need to know or adjust to serve the industry? Rayson and Saroop Bharwani, CEO and founder of Senso.ai, join Charles Potts to discuss how fintechs can accelerate community banks' digital transformation. This episode is sponsored by FIS.
In the final episode of our season on Dietrich Bonhoeffer, William speaks with Dr Dianne Rayson about her chapter Bonhoeffer in the Anthropocene: Ecoethics and Earthly Christianity in the book Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Theology, and Political Resistance. They discuss what it means to be living in the Anthropocene, the significance of Bonhoeffer's Christology for ecoethics, and the need for reconciliation not only with one another but with all other than human life. Connect with Di here. Buy the book here. Connect with SCM on: Instagram X TikTok Facebook
Welcome to our fifth episode of Masters of Risk. Join Yashi Yadav as she speaks with Allan Rayson, Chief Innovation and Technology Officer at Encore Bank, about what is top of mind for him during these economic times. Yashi dives deep into how Allan got to where he is in his career and what he has learned along the way. This is an episode you do not want to miss.
How does the work of Dietrich Bonhoeffer help us think ethically about the climate crisis? What is the shape of theology in the Anthropocene? In this conversation my co-host Dr. Jeff Pugh and I are joined by Dr. Dianne Rayson to discuss her work on Bonhoeffer and ecology. This was one of the live stream… Read more about Dianne Rayson: Bonhoeffer & Theology for the Anthropocene
Find more about Rayson Choo and his work in the links below:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/raygacy/?hl=enWebsite: http://www.raygacy.com/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/raysonc/Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmbNxORh7wJTbFjvsuKYUcQLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hireraysonchoo/Join us as we explore the incredible story of Rayson Choo. Born and raised in Singapore, Rayson shares his story on how mental illness within his family had impacted his upbringing. This led to a series of events that involved his mother going missing for a month and ultimately leading on to the split of his parents. Rayson shares about one of the impacts from this event had led to bullying in school and how it led to his current career as a nurse. Another incident in the nursing industry and his relationship with his girlfriend at the time had propelled him to fully committing to himself in the self-development sphere. Now, Rayson uses his platforms, aspiring to inspire before his life expires to spread the awareness of mental health and to help alleviate the lives of those around him.Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheFirstGenerationsPodcastWebsite: https://www.thefirstgenerationspodcast.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/FirstGenera...
FinTech and Banking. These two areas are representative of where Allan has built his career and where he will focus the remainder of his career. Allan is an accomplished banker and leader with a twenty year track record as a commercial banker and market executive in the commercial banking and specialty finance space. Allan is also former CEO and Co-Founder of PaidUp, a financial technology company designed to support youth sports clubs. Allan and his co-founders launched the startup in Austin, TX where they supported youth sports clubs across the domestic U.S. Applying what he has learned in FinTech and banking, Allan is now Chief Innovation Officer and Chief Technology Officer at an entrepreneurial bank called @encorebank.After earning his undergraduate marketing degree, Allan earned his MBA from Texas Tech University in 2000. In 2014, Allan also earned his Certified Private Wealth Advisor designation through the Investment Management Consultants Association ("IMCA") and the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business.Visit Encore Bank Here
Listen to ASCO's Journal of Clinical Oncology essay, “Cardio-Oncology” by Dr. Daniel Rayson, clinical oncologist at Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Center. The essay is followed by an interview with Rayson and host Dr. Lidia Schapira. Rayson shares a personal experience working with a patient who has two life-threatening diseases. TRANSCRIPT Narrator: Cardio-Oncology, by Dr. Daniel Rayson (10.1200/JCO.21.00971) I was asked to see a 64-year-old man in the coronary care unit (CCU) 4 days after he collapsed in his driveway after a seemingly normal day at work. His wife told the paramedics that he had been having episodes of chest pain in the past 2 weeks leading up to his dramatic homecoming and he was diagnosed with a myocardial infarction in the emergency room. An urgent cardiac catheterization revealed critical three-vessel coronary artery disease, and on the basis of his otherwise pristine past medical history, he was recommended to undergo coronary artery bypass surgery. His admission blood work, however, revealed a hemoglobin level of 91, much lower than the last available value of 137 roughly 1 year before. When questioned, he described having difficult bowel movements over a 3- to 4-month period with occasional blood-streaked stool. A computed tomography scan quickly diagnosed his second critical problem, a locally advanced sigmoid colon cancer with multifocal hepatic metastases. I was asked to see him urgently to help adjudicate the appropriateness of proceeding with the cardiac surgery in the face of a second competing life-threatening condition and to help the cardiology team elucidate the goals of care in the context of his oncologic prognosis. I had not been inside a CCU since the depths of my residency days and walked in awkwardly while trying to convince everyone that I belonged amid the ventilators, central lines, and constantly pinging monitors. Shuffling through the nursing station, I passed a bank of video surveillance screens that would not have looked out of place in a high security prison and despite being completely disoriented, I managed to find my patient. As I squeezed into a chair between the IV pole and the movable side table upon which lie the prized possessions of the hospitalized, I took mental note of the photo of his beaming family gazing up at him. I introduced myself and tried not to let the pinging cardiac monitor distract me from the discussion or add to the headache that was already beginning to pound. He seemed to become paler before my eyes as I slowly explained the scan findings to him. His liver was peppered with variably sized metastases, too many to reliably count, I explained in answer to his question. Although there was no biopsy confirmation of his disease, the constellation of clinical symptoms, blood work, and imaging left no room for doubt. “So, what am I in for,” he asked. I carefully explained why all therapies for his cancer would be noncurative in intent and why surgery would be limited to an urgent need to remedy bowel obstruction but would not change his overall prognosis. “Can't they just fix this at the same time they'll be fixing my heart?” he then asked. I circled back to why surgery could not deal with all of his disease and then spent the rest of the discussion talking about chemotherapy and the goals of treatment, which were to help him live as long and as well as he could with his cancer. “Until …?” “Until you die from the cancer,” I responded bluntly. “So let me get this straight … they want me to have surgery on my heart so that I can end up dying from my cancer? Do I have that right doc?” Oncologists are experts in reframing prognosis and expectations in the face of metastatic, incurable disease. It is an important part of our jobs to be able to convince people that the median survival time of 2-3 years for metastatic colon cancer is something to cheer about. It is equally important that we are able to clearly explain that a median is just a point estimate, without direct relevance to the individual in front of us, and that we are often unable to predict how close to and on what side of that median the future holds for them. “I guess that's right,” I replied, my eyes not leaving his. “It's a question of what would get me first,” he stated. I nodded, “In a sense, you know the answer already.” “Yes, I could have died in my driveway, that's true. I guess I just about did.” “As close as anyone can come to just about dying in their driveway, yes, you just about did.” “But if my heart does it, it will be quick, right? No pain. No drama. Just an ending, like almost happened?” I nodded. “But cancer-that's a whole other thing. Pain, vomiting, chemotherapy, weakness. Suffering. For me and my family.” I explained the lengths to which we try and control pain and other symptoms, from both disease and treatment, and reviewed the medical and supportive care that is designed to minimize suffering. “But doc, how often does that happen? How many times can you truly say that you were able to minimize suffering? And not just for your patients, what about the suffering you don't see? For my wife, my kids. How do you take care of their suffering as they spend the next 2-3 years, if I have that long, slowly watching me die of cancer?” By then, my headache was screaming at me. A hammer behind each eye was slamming down on chisels angled to the center of my brain. The incessant pings, beeps, and buzzes of the monitors and machines were laughing at my discomfort. We kept circling back to the competing timelines of two life-threatening illnesses, the dramatically different trajectories they take to death, and the different types of fallout and collateral damage to be expected. After an hour together, he had decided that death later would always be better than death now, and as we warmly shook hands, he turned the family photo toward me as final confirmation of the motivation behind his decision. I spent a few minutes collecting my thoughts and trying to soften the hammer blows to my head with some deep breathing and ibuprofen before venturing to the work room to dictate my consultation note and find the attending cardiologist. “Thanks for seeing Mr L, what do you think?” The chief cardiac surgery resident had found me first. It was not everyday that an oncologist is needed in the CCU. I was not as incognito as I thought. I explained the onco-scenario in detail and could sense the disappointment when I came to estimates of life expectancy. A median survival of 2-3 years after a bypass would be woefully inadequate from the perspective of a cardiac surgeon, whereas, for an oncologist, it represents a realistically optimal outcome with current therapeutic options. If an otherwise healthy patient survived cardiac surgery—an increasingly expected outcome given current technology—they are fixed and unlikely to ever suffer a cardiac death. An otherwise healthy patient with a metastatic cancer, however, is never healthy again. I could never fix Mr. L. I spent some time trying to convince the resident that the value of whatever time is left for any one patient is known only to them. And that the risk-benefit equation that underlies any medical or surgical decision is always assessed from the vulnerable position of the unwell with the ultimate decision usually made on the basis of parameters beyond medical or surgical outcome expectations. I noticed his eyes looking beyond me and knew that he was barely listening to my philosophical explanation as to why I recommended proceeding with the surgery. In the end, Mr L underwent a three-vessel coronary artery bypass graft, which he sailed through without complication. I took care of him for the next 4 years, sequencing both chemotherapy and targeted therapy as his disease waxed and waned in threat until finally there was no stopping it. I got to know his wife of 31 years who along with their three grown children celebrated the arrival of their first grandchild during one of his visits to the chemotherapy unit. I saw photos of family milestones along the path of his cancer journey and laughed with him when he was teased about his chemo-good looks. I wrote letters that he took with him on family trips to give to border control if he was asked about his narcotic medications or to medical personnel if they needed background and guidance if he got sick. He always told me that the letter was more important than his passport, knowing that there would be someone at the end of the line to help him and his family if he got into trouble. A few weeks after he died, I ran into one of my palliative care colleagues who I knew was involved in Mr. L's last weeks. He confirmed that he passed away peacefully and in comfort. His wife and three children were with him, and his favorite music was playing as he became unresponsive. I gave him my thanks for helping with his care and for allowing him to die in peace and turned away to walk back to the clinic. “Oh, one more thing,” he called out. I turned back in mid-stride. He told me to tell you that he was glad he did not die from a broken heart. Dr. Lidia Schapira: Hello and welcome to JCO's Cancer Stories The Art of Oncology, which features essays and personal reflections from authors exploring their experience in the field of oncology. I'm your host, Dr. Lidia Shapira, associate Editor for Art of Oncology and professor of Medicine at Stanford University. Today we are joined by Dr. Daniel Rayson, clinical oncologist at Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Center. In this episode, we will be discussing his Art of Oncology article, Cardio Oncology. At the time of this recording, our guest disclosures will be linked in the transcript. Daniel, welcome to our podcast and thank you for joining us. Dr. Daniel Rayson: Thank you very much for inviting me to be here with you today, Lidia. Dr. Lidia Schapira: It is a pleasure. I'd like to start by asking you some questions about your process for writing. You have written essays before and published them in many venues. What sorts of clinical episodes trigger your desire to write, reflect, and then what leads you to want to share them with readers? Dr. Daniel Rayson: That's a loaded question, but thanks for asking it. So, as far as the clinical scenarios, it's those episodes in routine practice that somehow get under my skin in one way or the other, whether it's due to a strange diagnosis, an unusual reaction or interaction I've had with the patient and/or their family, a challenge in clinical management, an end-of-life experience that's particularly touching or emotional, or increasingly for me, the juxtaposition of different stories amongst a group of people with perhaps somewhat similar diseases. So really very varied. It's interesting because sometimes it's only weeks after the fact I realize that something had affected me, and then I'll make a note in my phone and at some point I'll come back to it and start fleshing out themes that I think are worth exploring. And over time, and it's usually quite a bit of time, a story basically evolves. Dr. Lidia Schapira: You're an amazing storyteller. So let's focus a little on this particular story that you're telling and bring us to the bedside. Dr. Daniel Rayson: Yeah, so this is a story - all my essays are really absolutely true life - and I was called to the CCU for a patient who had just suffered a myocardial infarction and needed a three vessel bypass and at the same time was diagnosed with metastatic colon cancer. And probably the last time I had been in a CCU was maybe 15 years ago, I certainly can't recall. But, the juxtaposition of this fellow being faced with two life-threatening diseases, one of which would kill him very quickly as he collapsed in his driveway, leading to the CCU admission, and one of which would kill him in years to come, became a juxtaposition, if I can use that term again, that really stuck with me, both in terms of decision making, competing threats to life, the personal motivation of the patient, and trying to discuss the time frames with the cardiologists who have very different perspectives on clinical success by what they do. Dr. Lidia Schapira: I thought it was so interesting that you write that you have this hour-long conversation and more with the patient at bedside, and the patient says to you, ‘So, are you recommending that we fix my broken heart so I can die of cancer?' And that is just about as direct as it gets. And then you're explaining to the chief resident in cardiology for whom the two to three-month median that you're saying is likely life expectancy for somebody with this diagnosis, it just doesn't seem to be good enough. And there you are sort of juggling time estimates and trying to assign value to time left and time spent without ever having met him before. And then you tell us, and this is the part that I wanted to ask you a little bit about, that you have a splitting headache. How did that moment feel to you? Dr. Daniel Rayson: Well, even walking into the CCU, we get used to our environments, right? I'm sure that you as well, you walk into your cancer center, your home, everybody knows you, you know, everybody knows what everything is. Try walking into the CCU after having not been there for 15 years, and you are like a rat in a maze, completely out of your environment. So I was uncomfortable in the first step into the CCU. It just exponentially increased from there. Once I got to the bedside, face to face and talking in my little zone of oncology, everything seemed to settle. But as the discussion became more complex and all the monitors and all this stuff around this patient, yeah, I had just a pounding headache. And it didn't help talking to the CCU resident, who really had a hard time grasping what I think I was trying to convey. Dr. Lidia Schapira: And so your patient chose to have the surgery, and then he was under your care, you tell us for four years, during which you must have built a very solid therapeutic relationship. So did you and your patient, I wonder, ever go back and discuss what that consultation was like for him? Dr. Daniel Rayson: He was a very jovial kind of fellow with a great sense of humor. So we would come back to it every now and then, but only very glancingly in a way, ‘Remember how I looked then, Doc, before your chemo got me? I looked pretty good in the CCU compared to now, right?' That was his kind of attitude as we went through. It would come back to him, but not in a negative way at all. The interaction actually ends up being extremely positive, even that day. And we built on that going forward. Dr. Lidia Schapira: And his last words spoken to you through your colleague in palliative care just made me tear up. We often wonder if we did the right thing by our patients, and he basically told you so. Can you tell us what those last words were and how they felt to you? Dr. Daniel Rayson: Yeah. So this is again all true fact, basically running into the palliative care doctor who took care of him just his last days. And I was turning back to go to the clinic after thanking my colleague and he literally called out, ‘Oh, and one more thing. Mr. L told me to tell you that he was really glad he didn't end up dying from a broken heart.' I still kind of tear up when I think about that. It was kind of the ultimate thanks, really. I mean, he was very grateful all the way through, as was his family. That was probably the ultimate thanks. And that stayed with me for a long, long time. Obviously, still has really. Dr. Lidia Schapira: What I found so artful, if I may use that word, is that you take the reader to this very, very emotional, private moment and then you chose a title that couldn't be less emotional, ‘Cardio Oncology'. And I remember in the review process we asked you about that. So tell us a little about that choice. Dr. Daniel Rayson: I don't know if I can answer that clearly in a way that's satisfying to anybody except to say that Cardio Oncology has become this sub-practice of cardiology. Many centers have Cardio Oncology programs, research, et cetera. As I was writing this, I thought this has to be the title. This is the ultimate Cardio Oncology. This is it. And I stuck with it despite some discussion back and forth. I still think I'm glad we kept the title as it was. Dr. Lidia Schapira: It's so factual, right? And it's distracting because you read the title and you don't expect this essay, which is all about communication, connection, human relationships, and lived experience. Dr. Daniel Rayson: Exactly. And again, I think every subspecialty or little niche in oncology has got to have those basic communication and the whole story at the heart. And I guess maybe that was part why the title. Dr. Lidia Schapira: Yeah. You just mentioned the word communication. I wonder if you can reflect a little on the art of communication and communication skills for those of us working with patients with life-threatening illness and the art of storytelling. Do you see a connection and how do you experience that connection? Dr. Daniel Rayson: Oh, I really do. I think being open to the story is not only meaningful, but is really imperative to optimize communication. Oncology, particularly in the era of precision based medicine and all the high tech things, is very easily led down a very technological pathway. But in the end it's the patient in front of us, or family, like we all know. And the story is what grounds all the connection, all the understanding of preferences, motivations, decision making. And in the end it's what impacts us as people and as clinicians as well as our patients and families. So I see the story as integral in terms of teaching communication skills and taking time to listen, taking time to feel the story and be open to the story unfolding and realizing that, yes, it is a story. Every single case is a story I think is a helpful way to look at, broadly, communication. Dr. Lidia Schapira: There's another thing that I wanted to ask you, and that is, do you have any idea of how long it takes for the full story to emerge? It seems to me that you've been very patient with the stories you tell. You wait until years pass, sometimes until the relationship is complete, until there's a natural end to the story. How long does it take for these stories that you tell so beautifully about clinical practice actually to mature in your mind and then on paper? Dr. Daniel Rayson: That's a great question. And sometimes I'm very jealous of authors who seem to be able to really churn out work that's important to them. I've learned that's not me. In most cases; it takes a year or two beyond my first note and my phone call to come back to it. And I think what I've learned is that giving it time always, for me, maybe just for me, optimizes quality. Rushing, sending it out too early, just doesn't work. Just doesn't work. For some reason, I need to give it the time it takes, and it's a good one to two years on average. Dr. Lidia Schapira: It's interesting to hear you say that. It's taking me about twenty years to write the story that I'm trying to tell. And so it's good to know that there are some of us who seem to need that extra processing time. As somebody who has been so thoughtful about the stories and practices, how do you see the storytelling helping us sort of stay fresh and find joy in practice as, in a way, an antidote to burnout? Dr. Daniel Rayson: Yes, I think that stemming from a bit of an earlier question, is that being open to the story and the heterogeneity of the experiences that we deal with is affirming in humanity and our clinical practice. I think we can all get very tunnel vision and very tunnel focus so that everything starts sounding and feeling the same, which is, I believe, a prelude to sub-clinical burnout. Whereas taking the time to understand and feel the stories, and looking at people in their situation as stories, is a bit of an antidote to that. I like that word. I like that word. Not fully effective, sure, but, I think, a tool in our box. Dr. Lidia Schapira: My final question is this: after all these years and all this time thinking about it, if you were to walk into that CCU and could replay that scene, would you have done anything differently? Dr. Daniel Rayson: I think the only thing I probably would have taken a couple of extra strength ibuprofen before I ventured into the CCU. Dr. Lidia Schapira: That's so wonderful. And with that, until next time, thank you for listening to JCO's Cancer Stories: The Art of Oncology. Don't forget to give us a rating or review and be sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode. You can find all of ASCO's shows at asco.org/podcast. Dr. Daniel Rayson: Thank you very much, Lidia. It's been a pleasure. The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. Guest statements on the podcast do not express the opinions of ASCO. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement. Show Notes: Like, share and subscribe so you never miss an episode and leave a rating or review. Guest Bio: Dr. Daniel Rayson is a clinical oncologist at Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Center.
Second Sunday of Ordinary Time - John 1: 29-34 Dr Dianne Rayson is a public theologian and scholar of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Her main concerns are climate change and biodiversity loss, and how the church might ethically engage with these and other social problems, so her focus is on ecotheology. In her writing she has also addressed issues such as war, rape culture, and ecological degradation. She completed her PhD at The University of Newcastle (2017) and her book is Bonhoeffer and Climate Change: Theology and Ethics for the Anthropocene (Lexington, 2021). Di is a member of the Anglican Church of Australia where she preaches and she is regularly engaged in public contexts, including on ABC radio. She sees theology as a force for enriching both the life of the church and the community at large, and she loves to teach theology. Di is currently Senior Lecturer in Theology and Ethics at Pacific Theological College, Suva, Fiji, returning to the tropics after a long absence. She has lived and worked in Darwin, NT, and Papua New Guinea, working in public health and social policy. Her family home is on Biripi country in NSW where she gardens and grows food. She is a singer and cellist, and most at home in the ocean or the bush.
Named the 2022 Digital Banker of the year by American Banker, Allan Rayson has an impressive track record guiding financial institutions to success, sitting at the intersection of fintech and banking. Having most recently built Encore Bank's tech stack from the ground up, Allan joins host Joe Welu to share his journey, lessons learned, and how banks can navigate ever-changing markets while building lifetime relationships.
Join Karine Rayson and Industry leaders in this recording of a honest chat about Mens Mental Health. "Leaders whom I respect within our industry will be joining me for an organic (unscripted) conversation about the reality of mental health issues and why Crews are falling through the gaps. You will hear first-hand how the industry has failed but, more importantly, what action needs to occur for there to be a fundamental change." Karine Rayson To Contact Karine Rayson: www.thecrewcoach.com @the_crew_coach Instagram @thecrewcoach Facebook #mentalhealth #mentalhealthawareness #anxiety #selfcare #depression #selflove #love #health #wellness #mentalhealthmatters #motivation
Welcome, welcome all, to this episode of the Why to How Podcast, where we explore adventures in STEM. After an amazing CWSF a few months ago, I wanted to check in with our Platinum & Best Project award winners, to learn more about their science fair projects & the adventures they've had along the way. Today, I'm joined by Annabelle Rayson, a student from Lambton County and our Best Project Award - Discovery winner at CWSF 2022 for her project, "Plankton Wars: An Innovative Analysis of Daphnia Genotype Biomanipulation for Algae Bloom Prevention". Feel free to check out Annabelle's project and leave comments of support at: https://projectboard.world/ysc/project/plankton-wars-an-innovative-analysis-of-daphnia-genotype-biomanipulation-for-algae-bloom-prevention --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whytohow/message
Annabelle M. Rayson, of Canada, was the recipient of the prestigious 2022 Stockholm Junior Water Prize for her research on how to treat and prevent harmful algae blooms. Rayson's project, titled, Plankton Wars: An Innovative Analysis of Daphnia Genotype Biomanipulations for Algae Bloom Prevention, is a direct response to the struggles her father -- a commercial fisherman -- was facing. This conversation, guest hosted in Stockholm by Carolina Tornesi MacKinnon, Xylem Senior Product Management Analyst and World Youth Parliament for Water President, features Rayson and Hayati Yarkadas, Senior Vice President and President, Europe, Water Infrastructure and Global Services at Xylem, as they dive deeper into the winning project and explore the importance of engaging in water challenges early from different perspectives. For more information about the Stockholm Junior Water Prize, and to view Rayson's winning video presentation, visit: https://siwi.org/stockholm-junior-water-prize/
Brandon is an employment lawyer representing clients from Memphis to Mountain City, and across the nation. He advises clients in the boardroom, and he represents them in the courtroom. Half of his practice is devoted to serving as an outside general counsel for large and small businesses, colleges and universities, and religious institutions, advising them on human resource policies, employment laws, and litigation avoidance. The other half of his practice is spent litigating employment-related issues, such as discrimination, harassment, retaliation, wage and hour, non-compete, and trade secret claims. Linkedin:https://www.linkedin.com/in/brandon-l-morrow-995b9621/ Kramer Rayson LLP: https://www.kramer-rayson.com/ Learn more about EmotionTrac and our AI-driven Emotional Intelligence Platform: https://emotiontrac.com/calendly/ https://legal.emotiontrac.com/
Brandon is an employment lawyer representing clients from Memphis to Mountain City, and across the nation. He advises clients in the boardroom, and he represents them in the courtroom. Half of his practice is devoted to serving as an outside general counsel for large and small businesses, colleges and universities, and religious institutions, advising them on human resource policies, employment laws, and litigation avoidance. The other half of his practice is spent litigating employment-related issues, such as discrimination, harassment, retaliation, wage and hour, non-compete, and trade secret claims. Linkedin:https://www.linkedin.com/in/brandon-l-morrow-995b9621/ Kramer Rayson LLP: https://www.kramer-rayson.com/ Learn more about EmotionTrac and our AI-driven Emotional Intelligence Platform: https://emotiontrac.com/calendly/ https://legal.emotiontrac.com/
Adam & Matt discuss being a business owners & starting a restaurant with no money, growing up through a divorce, why businesses fail, what hospitality was like during Covid, relationship advice & more…
About my Guest Rayson Choo: Rayson is dubbed as "The Celebrity Whisperer". He picks the brains of the best entrepreneurs from across the globe such as Gary Vee, Grant Cardone and etc to find out from them what are some of the simple and effective steps that millennials can take to experience success in the swiftest and most effective way possible. He does that through his Podcast The Raygacy Show. The millennials who have listened to the podcast have experienced personal transformation from the tips and wisdom shared periodically. Rayson's mission is to inspire people around the world, creating more impact, legacy, and joy with his unique experience and knowledge that he has on Personal Mastery, Personal Branding and Professional Networking. He has been featured in numerous media both locally and internationally such as The Straits Times, 938. Live, Lian He Zao Bao, Brainz Magazine, to name a few. Top 3 snippets I liked from the episode: - His journey on how he built The Raygacy Show from scratch - the entire story is inspirational - The 5 things that would help in one's entrepreneurial journey. - About Success and Legacy More about Rayson Choo : Website: www.raygacy.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/raysonc Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hireraysonchoo/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/raygacy/ Podcast: The Raygacy Show You can listen to the episode from wherever you listen to podcasts. Do leave us a review if you liked the episode. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pallavikashyap/message
The Raygacy Show's Rayson Choo, a Singaporean with a singular point of view, is back with host DP Knudten for more about how he got his podcast off the ground—and around the world—one step and one episode at a time. Hear more from Rayson on his The Raygacy Show podcast wherever you get fine podcasts for FREE. ++++++ The NONFICTION BRAND podcast is hosted by DP Knudten and a variety of special guests. While focused on the art and craft of personal branding, each episode ranges widely based on whatever happened to be on the minds of DP and his guest(s). Each episode is sponsored by DP's book "NONFICTION BRAND—Discover, craft and communicate the 'completely true / completely you' brand you already are.” now available on Amazon at www.bit.ly/nonfiction_brand You can reach DP Knudten at: Email: dp@dpknudten.com Website: dpknudten.com | nonfictionbrand.com Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, et al: @dpknudten ©2022 DP Knudten LLC - all rights reserved Want to support DP and the NFB pod? Patreon makes it super easy here: https://www.patreon.com/nonfictionbrand Looking to add podcast guesting to your personal brand-boosting strategy? You should be. Check out Podmatch, a FREE podcast/guest matching service at https://podmatch.com/signup/dprecommends NONFICTION BRAND is hosted at Podbean. DP personally recommends this podcast hosting service for its quality, design, and ease of use. Check it our here: https://www.podbean.com/nonfictionbrand
This is one of three introductions to the book by Travis Washington and Sean Swain entitled Last Act of the Circus Animals, available from LittleBlackCart.com. Immediatism.com My other podcast, PointingTexts.org Feedback and requests to Cory@Immediatism.com, and your comment may be shared in a future episode. Donate
Singapore-based podcaster Rayson Choo joins host DP Knudten for a conversation about the power of podcasting for personal brands, and how they can very efficiently enable you to attract big names regardless of where you are on the globe. Hear more from Rayson on his Raygacy Show podcast wherever you get fine podcasts for FREE. ++++++ The NONFICTION BRAND podcast is hosted by DP Knudten and a variety of special guests. While focused on the art and craft of personal branding, each episode ranges widely based on whatever happened to be on the minds of DP and his guest(s). Each episode is sponsored by DP's book "NONFICTION BRAND—Discover, craft and communicate the 'completely true / completely you' brand you already are.” now available on Amazon at www.bit.ly/nonfiction_brand You can reach DP Knudten at: Email: dp@dpknudten.com Website: dpknudten.com | nonfictionbrand.com Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, et al: @dpknudten ©2022 DP Knudten LLC - all rights reserved Want to support DP and the NFB pod? Patreon makes it super easy here: https://www.patreon.com/nonfictionbrand Looking to add podcast guesting to your personal brand-boosting strategy? You should be. Check out Podmatch, a FREE podcast/guest matching service at https://podmatch.com/signup/dprecommends NONFICTION BRAND is hosted at Podbean. DP personally recommends this podcast hosting service for its quality, design, and ease of use. Check it our here: https://www.podbean.com/nonfictionbrand
Rayson Choo is dubbed as "The Celebrity Whisperer". On his podcast show, called The Raygacy Show, he loved to pick the brains of the best entrepreneurs in the world such as Gary Vee, Grant Cardone, Steve Sims etc. to find out from them what are some of the simple and effective steps that millennials can take to experience success in the swiftest and most effective way possible. His mission is to inspire people around the world, creating more impact, legacy and joy with his unique experience and knowledge that he has on Personal Mastery, Personal Branding and Professional Networking. He is a well-respected authority in the realm of Personal Branding and Professional Networking and has been featured numerous times in media both locally and internationally He lives by the belief that if we all knew how much we've missed out on by being uneducated, disconnected and broke, we'd be working a lot harder towards our goals. The person you will be in a year from now is based on the content you study, who you are mentored by and the people you surround yourself with today Some key points from our interview:· How he talks about growing up with a mother who had mental health issues.· How his mother's schizophrenia influenced him to train as a psychiatric nurse.· How he still works as a nurse alongside running his successful podcast show and feels he has his feet in two contrasting worlds.· How he's passionate about personal development and improvement to be the best version of himself.· How he believes that who you surround yourself with is very important. You can connect with Rayson here:Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/raysonc/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hireraysonchoo/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/raygacy/The Tribe of Raygacy: https://t.me/theraygacyshowfamily * * * *"Unbroken: Healing Through Storytelling" features individuals who have all triumphed after adversity and have not just bounced back in life, but forward and are now making a difference for others.Hosted by Madeleine Black, the show will share stories of all the amazing people Madeleine has met on her own journey as an author/speaker and these stories will heal, motivate, inspire and bring hope when they share their wisdom and knowledge with her.She really believes in the power that comes when we share our stories, that in fact we are not story tellers but story healers. Tune in to discover what helped them to stay unbroken and together we will discover that none of us are broken beyond repair.You can find out more about Madeleine, her story and her memoir, Unbroken, from her website: https://madeleineblack.co.uk/
Rayson Esquejo has ran social media marketing campaigns for multiple films including Jobs (2013) Side Effects (2013) and most recently for TFC and Wood Works. Taking a new technology and incorporating it into business strategy is easier said than done. We hear about Rayson's advice for keeping up with market trends and using social media for its advantages. Most recently, Rayson worked with Jay Leno to create TikToks for an upcoming film. This episode dives into over a decade of social media use to drive engagement in the entertainment industry. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/startupmindsets/support
In this episode of the podcast Corey interviews Dr. Dianne Rayson. Dr. Rayson holds a PhD in Theology from The University of Newcastle. She lectures in several universities following a career in public health and social policy in Australia and the Pacific and is the author of "Bonhoeffer and Climate Change: Theology and Ethics for the Anthropocene." In the interview we cover how Dr. Rayson discovered Bonhoeffer and provide an overview of his book "Bonhoeffer and Climate Change: Theology and Ethics for the Anthropocene." Thanks for listening! Support: patreon.com/bonhoefferpod Venmo Donations: @Corey-Tuttle-6
Catch up with Karine Rayson, aka The Crew Coach as we discuss the importance of mentorship, empowering crew and how being a leader can begin at any rank. Karine has been nominated for the well deserved ACREW Crew Award for Mentorship! #yachtcrew #crewawards #yachting #superyachts #superyachtcrew #superyachtlife #yachtcaptain #yachtchef #superyachtradio #yachtingpodcasts #yachtcast #superyachtchef #juniorcrew #mentorshipmatters
Rayson K. Alex is currently Assistant Professor at BITS-Pilani, K. K. Birla Goa Campus. He was awarded his Ph.D. in 2011 for his dissertation titled Symbiosis in the Songs of Mudugar from University of Madras, Chennai. He is the secretary of tiNai - a pioneering academic body in India promoting the area of ecocriticism. He is one of the editors of Essays in Ecocriticism (Sarup and Sons, New Delhi; 2007), the first volume in the area of ecocriticism in India, Culture and Media: Ecocritical Explorations (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, UK, 2014), Ecodocumentaries: Critical Essays (Palgrave Macmillan, USA and UK, 2016), the first volume on Indian ecocinema, and Ecocultural Ethics: Critical Essays (Lexington Books, USA, 2017). He has directed/co-directed a few ethnographic video-documentaries of which the popular ones are The Story of Mudugar, Narikuravar (Life of a gypsy community in Tamil Nadu), Jenukurubar (Life of a tribal community in Karnataka), Learning from Jenukurubar and Nila Paranjathu (What the Nila Said - art forms of the communities living on the banks of river Nila in Kerala). He is the Founder and co-Director of tiNai Ecofilm Festival.
Pentecost - Jn 15:26-27; 16:12-15 - The Spirit of Pentecost Dr Di Rayson is a public theologian whose specialties are ecotheology and Bonhoeffer. She lectures at various institutions including University of Newcastle and Uniting Theological College, Charles Sturt University, and previously at BBI – The Australian Institute for Theological Education. She is an Adjunct Research Fellow of the Public and Contextual Theology (PACT) Research Centre and is an elected board member of the International Bonhoeffer Society. Di helps edit two academic journals, The Bonhoeffer Legacy – An International Journal, and Perspectiva Teológica in Brazil. She is a research consultant for the National Church Life Survey (NCLS Research) and a member of Anglican EcoCare. Before theology, Di had an extensive career in public health, community development, and public policy, working as a missionary in Papua New Guinea and then in Australia's Northern Territory. She holds a Master of Public Health through her work in training village birth attendants in the Highlands of PNG. Her area of research is in the application of the theology of Dietrich Bonhoeffer to ecotheology and ecoethics, based on a deep relationality with all creation. Her first book, Bonhoeffer and Climate Change: Theology and Ethics for the Anthropocene, is about to be released. She has published on other issues such as ecofeminism, war, and rape culture. Di regularly preaches in her home Anglican parish and is a guest preacher in other denominations. She speaks in a wide variety of settings here and abroad (COVID permitting!). She periodically appears on ABC Radio to discuss moral and ethical issues. Her passion is to bring good theology to the service of the church community and to communicate it widely and well. Di lives on Biripi country on a small farm with her family of humans, animals and plants.
Podcast host Rayson Choo understands the importance of adopting the collective wisdom of your network. Rayson teaches entrepreneurs how to build a community on his podcast The Raygacy Show, where he interviews entrepreneurs such as Gary Vee, Grant Cardone and others. His personal journey taught him the most significant lesson that a servant heart is the key that unlocks a purposeful life. Share how you are building your inner circle with @Raygacy or on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/raysonc/ Tune into The Raygacy Show to be led by the top entrepreneurs in business! Interested in joining Rayson’s tribe? Check out: https://t.me/theraygacyshowfamily
Hear our conversation with Extinction's playwright Hannie Rayson and director Martin Jarvis.
The wait is over! Are you interested in building your personal brand or interested to network with influencers? In today's episode, I have invited Rayson Choo: Podcast Host of The Raygacy Show, Celebrity Whisperer, and much more. Rayson shared some massive and fantastic insights on personal branding, podcast growth, and scaling, networking, etc. Some of the Biggest Takeaways of the episode with Rayson were: ✅ Branding = Uniquely You, Passionate, Exposure, and much more ✅ Growing Audience = Be a Leader ✅ You are You, They are them ✅ Applied Network = Net worth ✅ Network = Focused Tribe, Create Value by Association, and Opportunity and so much more What is your take on personal branding, etc? Thoughts on networking? Any insight on how to build a personal brand online? And much more Connect with Rayson on the below platforms, etc: LinkedIn/FB: Rayson Choo Instagram: raygacy To connect with like-minded people, network with Rayson's past guests, etc Join the Tribe of Raygacy. Link to join the Telegram Group here: https://t.me/theraygacyshowfamily Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/raysonc/ Rayson Choo YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmbNxORh7wJTbFjvsuKYUcQ/featured Listen to Rayson's podcast The Raygacy Show on the below platforms: Apple Podcast:https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-raygacy-show/id1435706344 Anchor: https://anchor.fm/theraygacyshow Connect with the host Roohi Kazi on the below platforms, etc: Instagram-roohik2 LinkedIn: Roohi Kazi Visit this link for more listening options/platforms for the Business Podcast by Roohi, and next step groups: https://bop.me/roohikaz Business Podcast by Roohi website: https://6thimbles.wixsite.com/bizpodroohi
We chat with Karine Rayson, The Crew Coach and winner of 'Duty of Care' ACREW Crew Awards, as she shares her experience of working in the prison service to working in yachting, understanding the nuances that culture and gender can colour our presentation for mental health, and some guiding advice to live by! #CrewAwards2020 #superyachts #yachting #yachtcrew #yachtingpodcasts #superyachtradio #yachtcast #ACREW #yachtcaptain #marine #yachtlife
Meet Karine the director of The Crew Coach. Karine helps crew gain mastery in their personal and professional life. She aids crew before they enter the industry, while they are on board and later to transition them to land with an exit strategy. Karine has had a dynamic career from having worked with special needs children, was yacht crew, worked for the department of justice as a Clinician, and as a program facilitator in maximum correctional facilities. She has degrees in organizational psychology, psychology, counseling and business. She is obsessed with her work and loves seeing her clients thrive. FOLLOW KARINE: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thecrewcoach/ - FOLLOW THE CREW COACH: https://thecrewcoach.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_crew_coach/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-crew-coach/about/ - FOLLOW YACHT FEMME: Apple podcast: https://apple.co/3hICGTc Spotify :http://bit.ly/spotify-Yacht-Femme YouTube: http://bit.ly/YT-Yachtdame Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/yachtfemme/ https://anchor.fm/yacht-femme
Men, Mental Health and Isolation. An exclusive interview with Scott where he shares his personal battle with mental health issues and how he turned his experience in bringing about positive change in the workplace..
Rory Peters is a Strategic Success Coach, a Speaker, a Leadership Trainer, and the author of two books. You know when you think about where you are in your life and you say to yourself, “I'm capable of doing so much more than this.” Rory helps those people! Rory helps his clients transform their vision of who they can be, into who they are. Rory's strategies have been developed and honed from over 20 years of personal experience. Everything he teaches has come from his own real-world experiences and of those he has coached. His strategies helped him become the top salesperson everywhere he worked. As a sales leader he took the computer division of a Fortune 100 company from the bottom to #1 in the nation in 12 months. In a major career change, he became a Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer and Instructor earning Instructor of the Year, 3 years in a row, and he has built highly successful and profitable training departments from the ground up. As a speaker and trainer, he has given sales training for clients such as Universal Studios Retail Stores, conducted leadership seminars for clients such as Alcoa and Rexnord, and keynoted national conventions. Rory's passion is in making a difference in people's lives. He does that by teaching the culmination of everything he has learned about success over the past 20 years.If you are in need of counselling services, please do head over to thecrewcoach.com and send Karine an email!
Meet Karine the director of The Crew Coach.Karine helps crew gain mastery in their personal and professional life. She aids crew before they enter the industry, while they are on board and later to transition them to land with an exit strategy.Karine has had a dynamic career from having worked with special needs children, was yacht crew, worked for the department of justice as a Clinician, and as a program facilitator in maximum correctional facilities. She has degrees in organizational psychology, psychology, counseling and business.She is obsessed with her work and loves seeing her clients thrive.-FOLLOW THE CREW COACH:Instagram: @the_crew_coachhttps://thecrewcoach.com/-FOLLOW KARINE:https://www.linkedin.com/in/thecrewcoach/-FOLLOW YACHT FEMME:Apple podcast: https://apple.co/3hICGTcInstagram: @yachtfemmehttps://anchor.fm/yacht-femme
This week Karine is joined by Tanya, a Russian crew member that speaks about how misunderstandings can arise through simple differences in culture and way of speaking. If you have had difficulties with your fellow crew as a result of these misunderstandings, this is one for you!If you are in need of counselling services, please do head over to thecrewcoach.com and send Karine an email!
Pamela Spence Medical Herbalist MNIMHPamela is a medical herbalist, writer and educator and has run a successful clinical practice for over 13 years from her home on Scotland's beautiful west coast. She is the Twinings herbal expert and advises the company on their herbal blends internationally including the hugely popular Twinings Superblends range. She also runs an online community for busy women who do too much and don't know how to stop called Nurtured by Nature. Pamela is regularly spotted in print as a herbal expert, most recently in OK! Magazine, the Financial times, Woman & Home, Pick Me Up magazine and she regularly contributes to Your Healthy Living and Net Doctor. She has written and presented her own BBC online series on traditional herbal medicine and teaches herbal medicine and ethnobotany internationally both informally and on professional herbal training courses. www.pamelaspence.co.ukwww.plantpotential.co.ukFB: www.facebook.com/PamelaSpenceHerbalistIG: www.instagram.com/pamelaspenceherbalistYouTube: bit.ly/3bS1jKlIf you are in need of counselling or coaching, please do head over to thecrewcoach.com
Pamela Spence Medical Herbalist MNIMHPamela is a medical herbalist, writer and educator and has run a successful clinical practice for over 13 years from her home on Scotland's beautiful west coast. She is the Twinings herbal expert and advises the company on their herbal blends internationally including the hugely popular Twinings Superblends range. She also runs an online community for busy women who do too much and don't know how to stop called Nurtured by Nature. Pamela is regularly spotted in print as a herbal expert, most recently in OK! Magazine, the Financial times, Woman & Home, Pick Me Up magazine and she regularly contributes to Your Healthy Living and Net Doctor. She has written and presented her own BBC online series on traditional herbal medicine and teaches herbal medicine and ethnobotany internationally both informally and on professional herbal training courses. www.pamelaspence.co.ukwww.plantpotential.co.ukFB: www.facebook.com/PamelaSpenceHerbalistIG: www.instagram.com/pamelaspenceherbalistYouTube: bit.ly/3bS1jKlIf you are in need of counselling or coaching, please do head over to thecrewcoach.com
Pamela Spence Medical Herbalist MNIMHPamela is a medical herbalist, writer and educator and has run a successful clinical practice for over 13 years from her home on Scotland's beautiful west coast. She is the Twinings herbal expert and advises the company on their herbal blends internationally including the hugely popular Twinings Superblends range. She also runs an online community for busy women who do too much and don't know how to stop called Nurtured by Nature. Pamela is regularly spotted in print as a herbal expert, most recently in OK! Magazine, the Financial times, Woman & Home, Pick Me Up magazine and she regularly contributes to Your Healthy Living and Net Doctor. She has written and presented her own BBC online series on traditional herbal medicine and teaches herbal medicine and ethnobotany internationally both informally and on professional herbal training courses. www.pamelaspence.co.ukwww.plantpotential.co.ukFB: www.facebook.com/PamelaSpenceHerbalistIG: www.instagram.com/pamelaspenceherbalistYouTube: bit.ly/3bS1jKl
This week we continue with the series on Mens Mental Health. Meet Brad Techow, Co-Founder at Mocean Community. Leveraging the power of Community!To find out more about Mocean Community head over to Instagram or Facebook @moceancommunityIf you are in need of counselling, head over to thecrewcoach.com.
HAVE YOU EVER EXPERIENCED STRESS OR BURNOUT? IF SO THEN MAYBE YOU CAN RELATE?Stress and burnout contributed to Benjamin having a “meltdown” while guests were on board.Benjamin, chief steward, honestly shares his personal experience when he didn't voice his frustrations - his captain had done several things that bothered him over the course of several months...then one evening during service, the captain said something which triggered the onset of a “meltdown”.In this interview Benjamin talks about his learnings from the experience and also touches on what it was like to have one of the deckhands to check in on him and ask if he was ok.I have no doubt you will be able to relate to Benjamin's experience.If you are in need of counselling, please head over to thecrewcoach.comFollow The Crew Coach: https://www.facebook.com/thecrewcoachhttps://www.instagram.com/the_crew_coach/
It is such a pleasure to introduce you to...⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀CAPTAIN BRENDAN O'SHANNASSY⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀I love doing interviews for YIR as it has opened my mind to new perspectives on life that I would have not been previously aware of. Brendan shares his learnings as a Captain when it comes to managing crew and safeguarding their mental health. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀If you are in need of counselling, please head over to thecrewcoach.com
November is Men's Health month and Karine will be focusing on creating awareness! Meet Ari, in this interview he opens up about his relationship with alcohol, a horrific accident as a result and what it is like to open up as a man.If you are in need of counselling services, please check out their website at thecrewcoach.com
I had the BEST time interviewing Dominique!We talked all about my favourite things like ...⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀☀️ personal growth☀️ finding your purpose☀️ leadership⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Dominique Dominique Narciso is an American Entrepreneur and International Success Coach, and Founder of the Narciso Kim Group. She helps international professionals living abroad redefine personal and professional success, so that they can create simple lives with more income, impact, and freedom. She is a frequent speaker for the US Embassy in Seoul on the topics of Success, Leadership, Positive Thinking, and Well-Being.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀She is the host of The Positive Success Show. She currently lives in Seoul, South Korea with her wife and three daughters.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀I am so excited to present Dominique to the TCC Tribe MEMBERS next month for a live workshop
CONFRONT THE BULLY!⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Hmmmm really?! It's not that easy...⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Bullies are good at breaking down your sense of self worth, they can make you feel really small to the point where you even question your own judgment .... “maybe it is me, maybe I am the problem”⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀...Believe me it's not you. Bullies have difficulties around self regulating their emotions as such it comes out in the wrong way. Because they are unable to control their own emotions they attempt to control others...⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀This week I talk about the key ingredients required on board to make a better workplace for all...⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Bullies can be found in all departments and of all ranks ... these skills that I share in the presentation should be actively demonstrated by all crew members. And leaders should be role modelling these behaviours if they want a positive on board culture.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀They are not the easiest concepts to grasp but they certainly can be learnt and we go in great depths in these skills in my leadership course.If you are in need of counselling services, please check out their website at thecrewcoach.com
Meet Karine Rayson (IG @the_crew_coach), an amazing multi-talented entrepreneur from South Africa. In this interview, she shares her journey to entrepreneurship through her adventures in teaching at Montessori schools , super yachting in the Mediterranean, and counseling in Australian prisons.
Are you REALLY happy at work?
Do you struggle with saying NO?Kim said YES to EVERYTHING, AND EVERYBODY.If you asked Kim, can you get this to me tomorrow? She would say yes. There were so many nights that she would be stuck at her desk with her eyes crossing, having to redo things four or five times because she was just so tired.Sounds familiar?!Sleep deprivation is a common issue within our industry and sleep debt is a real thing.Kim experienced sleep deprivation, anxiety and depression simultaneously for four years until she learnt to say no.“I think I correlated saying no to burning bridges, when in fact, you can build stronger bridges by saying no, because when you say no to 90% of things, and you say yes, to only the 10% or less, that are actually are good for you, then you can use them so much better”For more information on The Crew Coach, head over to her website at thecrewcoach.com. #settingboundaries #selflove #happylife #wellbeing #crewsupport #TheCrewCoach #mentalhealth #mentalhealthawareness #anxiety #selfcare #depression #selflove #health #mentalhealthmatters #motivation #therapy #mentalillness #healing #fitness #psychology #recovery #wellbeing #ptsd #loveyourself #meditation #inspiration #positivity #yachting #yachtcrew #yachtlife
LET'S TALK ABOUT ALCOHOL...⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Alcohol can serve many purposes for Mike it started off as a social lubricant and a way of coping at the age of 15.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀The alcohol intake got steadily worse in time.At the age of 42, Mike's family doctor told him that after he'd done a series of liver function tests that he'd never seen a liver in such a dire condition. Mike was close to loosing his life.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀Tune in on yachting international radio this Wednesday to hear about Mike's experience with alcohol abuse and how he has managed to abstain from drinking alcohol.If you are in need of counselling services, head over to thecrewcoach.com⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀#TheCrewCoach #supportingcrew #mentalhealth #addiction
I sat down with Dr Di Rayson to talk about teaching theology, being a Christian in green movements, and how to appropriately call on Bonhoeffer when engaging contemporary issues. Di is a public theologian with special interest in climate change, ecoethics, and ecofeminism. She often teaches at The University of Newcastle Australia, where she did her PhD, on Bonhoeffer's Theology and Anthropogenic Climate Change. Di has worked on other contemporary issues such as war, rape culture, and theology and the arts. She has also published on Bonhoeffer and Gandhi and Bonhoeffer's political theology.In November she is teaching a course on Creation and Eco Theology with United Theological College and Charles Sturt University. The course runs from Nov 9-13 both online and at UTC in North Parramatta. For more information, or to enrol, please contact Joanne Stokes at joannes@nswact.uca.org.auFollow the show: @RinseRepeatPod // Follow me: @liammiller87Find More: www.loverinserepeat.com
Graeme Rayson has been serving the community for 27 years with the South Australian Ambulance Service (SAAS). The Murray Bridge man won the 2019 Ambulance Service Medal for his varied work in operation, road and intensive care paramedic roles. He joins Jennie Lenman for a chat about it for Thank a First Responder Day.
This quarantined conversation with Rayson took place on May 5th, 2020, at the height of the world-wide Coronavirus Pandemic. Rayson is the host of the Raygacy Show, where he is a motivational and inspirational speaker, where he has had the privilege of interviewing top entrepreneurs such as Gary Vaynerchuk and Grant Cardone. He is also a nurse at the Institute of Mental Health in Singapore. I invited Rayson on today because I wanted to get his personal experience with being quarantined from Singapore with the current COVID-19 / Coronavirus crisis. There, they are also experiencing shutdowns and stay-at-home orders; however, they call it the “Circuit Breaker.” Rayson shares a little bit of how the Circuit Breaker got its name. I first interviewed Rayson about 2 years ago in episode #59, and at that time, he had about 1000 followers on Instagram, and now, just 2 years later, he has over 10,000 followers! He was kind to give us a quick rundown of how he has been able to grow his brand so quickly. Rayson tells us about the 5-Points to Hand Hygiene, which are, “Wash your hands…” before touching a patient, before clean/aseptic procedures, after body fluid exposure/risk, after touching a patient, and. after touching patient surroundings. Rayson ends with encouraging everyone to take this time, while quarantined, to reconsider what it is that you want your life to be and go for it. You only have one life to live. No one can live your life for you, and there is only one you. It's up to you to build the life that you want. He encourages us to come out stronger and let yourself be known to the world. Follow Rayson on: YouTube: Raygacy Vlogs Facebook: Rayson Choo Instagram: @raygacy Rayson's Telegram Group Additional: Rayson mentions the book, The Secret by Rhonda Byrne, which is a book about the laws of attraction, positivity, mindfulness, etc…, and you can watch Rayson's interview with Bob Doyle here.
This quarantined conversation with Rayson took place on May 5th, 2020, at the height of the world-wide Coronavirus Pandemic. Rayson is the host of the Raygacy Show, where he is a motivational and inspirational speaker, where he has had the privilege of interviewing top entrepreneurs such as Gary Vaynerchuk and Grant Cardone. He is also a nurse at the Institute of Mental Health in Singapore. I invited Rayson on today because I wanted to get his personal experience with being quarantined from Singapore with the current COVID-19 / Coronavirus crisis. There, they are also experiencing shutdowns and stay-at-home orders; however, they call it the “Circuit Breaker.” Rayson shares a little bit of how the Circuit Breaker got its name. I first interviewed Rayson about 2 years ago in episode #59, and at that time, he had about 1000 followers on Instagram, and now, just 2 years later, he has over 10,000 followers! He was kind to give us a quick rundown of how he has been able to grow his brand so quickly. Rayson tells us about the 5-Points to Hand Hygiene, which are, “Wash your hands…” before touching a patient, before clean/aseptic procedures, after body fluid exposure/risk, after touching a patient, and. after touching patient surroundings. Rayson ends with encouraging everyone to take this time, while quarantined, to reconsider what it is that you want your life to be and go for it. You only have one life to live. No one can live your life for you, and there is only one you. It’s up to you to build the life that you want. He encourages us to come out stronger and let yourself be known to the world. Follow Rayson on: YouTube: Raygacy Vlogs Facebook: Rayson Choo Instagram: @raygacy Rayson's Telegram Group Additional: Rayson mentions the book, The Secret by Rhonda Byrne, which is a book about the laws of attraction, positivity, mindfulness, etc…, and you can watch Rayson’s interview with Bob Doyle here.
Karine Rayson, The Crew Coach joins us and Richard Wasson, ex-yachtie and founder of ´Success After Sea´, as he shares with us his very personal experience of how his mental health deteriorated while working onboard, the journey to recognizing it and the difficulties that many face in leaving yachting, which has brought him to his present work in helping people transition from life on board to life onshore,
Author Alice Williams chats about her self-help memoir 'Bad Yogi'; and playwright Hannie Rayson talks about being the Festival Programmer for this weekend’s Yarra Valley Writers Festival.This week’s Comfort Read is ‘Love in The Time of Cholera’ and Mel asks listeners to share their thoughts on the classic novel using the hashtag #loveinthetimeofbackstory on Insta. Meet Me For Launch features Chris Flynn’s ‘Mammoth’ out now through UQP.With presenter Mel Cranenburgh.
This interview first aired on Friday the 13th of March 2020 on ONE FM 98.5 Shepparton. One FM announcer Bridget Feenan interviews playwright/screenwriter Hannie Rayson and theatre director/historian Michael Cathcart about a writing workshop for the Shepparton Festival they will be presenting on Saturday the 14th and Sunday the 15th of March. The writing workshop is How to Write the Story of Your Life and they also speak about a writing workshop they will be conducting in Shepparton this winter. Listen to Brigid Feenan live on Friday afternoons from 3pm-6pm. Contact the station on admin@fm985.com.au or (+613) 58313131 The ONE FM 98.5 Community Radio podcast page operates under the license of Goulburn Valley Community Radio Inc. (ONE FM) Number 1385226/1.
MPF discussion with Rayson ChooWhy Plan B Sucks with Rayson ChooAbout RaysonRayson is a Transformation Catalyst. What he does for a living is he picks the brains of the best entrepreneurs you have in this world such as Gary Vee, Grant Cardone, etc to find out from them what are some of the simple and effective steps that millennials like himself can take to experience success in the swiftest and most effective way possible. He does that through podcasting. The millennials who have listened to the podcast have experienced personal transformation because they have gotten the tips they need to move forward. On this episode of My Perfect Failure (Why Plan B Sucks) Raygacy Show Podcast host Rayson Choo explains why we should always focus on our destiny and stick to our Plan A and not settle for Plan B. Rayson takes us on a journey and reveals his trials and tribulations, from loosing his Job to splitting up with his girlfriend all in quick succession. Some of the areas we cover. · Rayson talks about the trauma of losing his Job and Splitting up with his girlfriend· Rayson explains why Plan B Sucks and why we should always stick to Plan A· Rayson talks about how he got to meet Gary Vaynerchuk· We talk about Rayson’s popular podcast the Raygacy Show Raygacy Show Podcast Podcast link: https://apple.co/3422gwcRayson’s Instagram· Instagram link: https://www.instagram.com/raygacy/ Rayson’s Facebook· Facebook link: https://m.facebook.com/raysonc Rayson’s LinkedIn· Linkedin Link: https://sg.linkedin.com/in/raysonchoo Rayson’s Telegram Group· Telegram Group: https://t.me/theraygacyshowfamilyPlease leave a reviewPlease if you can leave a review at https://www.podchaser.com/MyPerfectFailure or the platform of your choice that would be great My Perfect Failure contact me Work with me: paul@myperfectfailure.comMPF Website: http://www.myperfectfailure.com/ Insta: follow: https://www.instagram.com/padsmpf/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/failure_perfect Facebook MPF Private Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/377418129517757/
Rayson Choo is a Transformation Catalyst. What he does for a living is pick the brains of the best entrepreneurs in this world such as Gary Vaynerchuk, Grant Cardone, and others to find out simple and effective steps that millennials can take to experience success in the swiftest and most effective way possible. He does this through podcasting, where he helps millennials to experience personal transformation from the tips that they need to move forward. “Just being friends with multi-millionaires won’t make you successful. What makes you successful is applying the knowledge that they have imparted to you.” Rayson Choo Worst investment ever Starting his entrepreneurship journey Rayson met a gentleman about three years ago, and they quickly became friends. Rayson found the friendship quite beneficial as they got along pretty well. They would attend all these seminars and conferences together. Often, they would discuss business and future projects and help each other out with the brainstorming. A caring friend lends a hand The gentleman happened to be a financial service provider, and so one day he sat Rayson down and they discussed his financial plans. They also talked about the kind of insurance coverage that he had. It so happened that Rayson didn’t have any insurance. His friend told him that it was best he considered investing in insurance. He recommended an Investment-linked Insurance Policy (ILP). He explained to him that if he invests X amount, he will get a certain amount of money back. He promised that the monthly payment would increase in a couple of years, and the investment returns would come in as well. Trusting his good friend Because Rayson didn’t have any insurance at the moment, he thought, this could be a good thing. Having been good friends for a couple of years, Rayson put his trust in his friend and signed up right away without giving it much thought. His friend knew him well so definitely he was recommending something good for him. Rayson even went on to recommend him to his other friends, some who also signed up for the insurance policy. Never mix business with friendship Rayson was excited about his new investment and he would talk about it with his friends and podcast listeners. After a while, another friend, who is also a financial consultant, told him that the kind of insurance he’d signed up for wasn’t making financial sense. Rayson, confident in the friend who sold him the policy, rubbed this off as a case of one consultant being jealous of the other. One day he met up with a listener, and as they were talking about the podcast they happened to also talk about affordable insurance. Rayson told the listener about his, and the doubts his friend has been having about it. The listener drew the insurance plan down for him and it all made sense now. It became clear that his friend had duped him into signing up for a policy that would see himself benefit more than Rayson would. It made the most sense to cancel the insurance policy right away even though the friendship was, obviously, not salvaged. At this point, Rayson had already made thousands of dollars in payments, and all he could get back was 1,000 Singapore dollars. To add salt into injury, he had to use that money to pay the remaining term of the insurance policy. Lessons learned Never allow your emotions to affect your buying power Don’t use your emotions to buy anything as it affects your buying power. Investing in anything to blindly support a friend is a no-no. Treat this investment with caution just as you would any other. Ask yourself, why do you need that product? Is it only to support the person selling it? Or is it because that product is really useful to you? Educate yourself about the product first Before you go and sign up for anything, do your research and learn as much as you can about the product you’re about to invest in. Andrew’s takeaways Don’t be quick to invest Don’t be so quick to invest in any product. Take your time to learn about the product and gain a deeper knowledge of it. Know your rights as an investor A few things that you should expect from any financial services provider: You have the right to honest, competent, and ethical conduct that complies with applicable laws. Your financial interest takes precedence over those of the professional and the organization that is approaching you. You have the right to an explanation of fees and costs charged to you. These fees should be fair and reasonable. If you don't understand something, you have the right to demand that it's explained over and over again, in a simple way until you understand it. Take as much time as you need before making a decision Don’t let anyone pressure you into making a quick investment decision. You have a right to take your time to study the product, sleep on it, weigh your pros and cons until you’re ready to say yes or no to the product. Talk to other people about the investment Tell people about the product you’re thinking about investing in to get their thoughts about it. Someone may save you from making your worst investment ever. However, don't let anyone drive you down a path where they're pushing you to make a decision. Remember, this should be part of learning about the product. Actionable advice When signing up for any investment, find out the terms of canceling the investment midway. With some investments, you might still have to pay the full amount even after canceling. No. 1 goal for the next 12 months Rayson’s number one goal for the next 12 months is to complete a book he is writing based on the idea from Tim Ferriss’s Tribe of Mentors. So similar concept, but different in terms of content and other parts of the concepts as well. He’s also working on an online course to teach people how to be more fluent in terms of branding and how to strategically connect with people like Vaynerchuk, Grant Cardone, and other celebrities, multi-millionaires, and entrepreneurs without any manipulation but by being authentic. Parting words “You're going to live your life as you alone. You only have one life to live as you, so live it to the fullest. Your life is dictated by you, not by others. They can share with you certain ground rules, what you can do, what you can't. But, ultimately, you are the one who chooses.” Rayson Choo Connect with Rayson Choo LinkedIn Facebook Instagram YouTube Website Blog Andrew’s books How to Start Building Your Wealth Investing in the Stock Market My Worst Investment Ever 9 Valuation Mistakes and How to Avoid Them Transform Your Business with Dr.Deming’s 14 Points Andrew’s online programs Valuation Master Class Women Building Wealth The Build Your Wealth Membership Group Become a Great Presenter and Increase Your Influence Transform Your Business with Dr. Deming’s 14 Points Connect with Andrew Stotz: astotz.com LinkedIn Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube My Worst Investment Ever Podcast Further reading mentioned Tim Ferriss (2017) Tribe of Mentors: Short Life Advice from the Best in the World
Welcome The BG Podcast! Conversations at the intersection of business, community, and public policy, from the Austin metro and around Texas. Today we speak with Allan Rayson, Central Texas Market Executive, Regions Bank, which is one of the nation's largest full-service providers of consumer and commercial banking, wealth management, and mortgage products and services. Allan and Bingham Group CEO A.J. discuss the commercial real estate market in Austin from a banking perspective.
Welcome to the "Showing Up BIG!" Podcast. Description: In today's noisy, distracted and desensitized world, irresponsible and morally bankrupt information is prevalent. As an alternative, we offer the Showing Up BIG! Podcast, where our “free-range guests” serve up their REAL stories, REAL problems, and UNREAL results, in their Zone of Genius! Episode Notes: In Episode 21, we are going out to the island of Singapore, to be with Psychiatric Nurse, Podcaster, Motivational Speaker, Trainer, Life Coach and awesome human, Rayson Choo! This guys is CRUSHING IT and blazing a trail few have ever dared! His story is truly inspiring and the progression from uncertainty and admitted cluelessness in 2014, to interviewing Grant Cardone and Gary Vaynerchuk on his own Podcast in 2019! Talk about WOW!! Rayson's attitude, transparency and vulnerability will leave you smiling and inspired. Listening to his story, makes you just want to cheer him on in everything! Jump on over and listen to Rayson's story of determination, focused action, intensity, drive and the sheer will to succeed! Are you ready? Press PLAY and dive in! Follow Rayson on the following social media platforms: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/Raygacy/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/raysonc LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/raysonchoo/ Make sure to follow Rayson, as he will be a Featured Speaker next month at The Nursepreneur Summit! Details here: https://thenursepreneursummit.com #raysonchoo #raygacy #showingupbig #podcast #speaker #motivator #consultant #leader #business #success #nursepreneur Please Subscribe and Review in iTunes. Are you subscribed to my podcast? If you're not, I want to encourage you to do that today. Seriously! I have great plans to add BONUS episodes for Subscribers and even have secret SPECIAL GIVEAWAYS too! If you're not Subscribed, there's a good chance you might miss out on these cool Bonus Episodes and awesome stuff I will be giving away! Click here to Subscribe in Apple Podcasts! If you're feeling super awesome, I would really love it, and be super duper grateful if you left me a 5-star Review on iTunes too, Those reviews will help other people find my podcast, and I love to read them! So THANK YOU in advance! Just click here to submit a review. Please select "Ratings and Reviews" and "Write a Review" and let me know what your favorite part of the podcast is. THANK YOU! If you enjoyed this episode and love the format of the Showing Up BIG! Podcast, and helping people find their lane in life, and leave their mark on the world, while Blessing people, would you PLEASE help us with this mission of spreading GOODNESS?? All you have to do is leave a quick review on iTunes and make sure to subscribe too (if you haven't already). Your kind gesture would seriously ensure GOODNESS gets a foothold in our pessimistically lop-sided world, AND would truly mean the world to me, so THANK YOU in advance for being the awesome free-range human that you are!
Alex Lloyd discovers the stories of four Victoria Cross recipients in the British Army, speaking with the Axe Keeper of Her Majesty's Body Guard of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms, Tim Rayson. Life on the Line tracks down Australian war veterans and records their stories. Today's bonus episode is centred on four British Victoria Cross recipients. All four are also former members of Her Majesty’s Body Guard of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms. Alex Lloyd spoke with Tim Rayson, the ‘Axe Keeper’, about the incredible stories of Ernest Towse VC, Harry Schofield VC, John Campbell VC and David Jamieson VC. The music at the end of the episode is “The Nearest Guard”, especially composed by Major Philip Shannon MBE for the 500th anniversary of the Honourable Corps on 4th June 2009. This recording was performed by the Band of the Irish Guards and supplied by the Axe Keeper. Tim Rayson last appeared on the podcast talking about the history of Her Majesty’s Body Guard of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms. To see photos related to today's interview, visit our website - www.lifeonthelinepodcast.com - or follow us on social media: @lifeonthelinepodcast on Facebook and Instagram, and @LOTLpod on Twitter.
Rayson Esquejo Freelance Marketing Consultant at RaysonMedia is interviewed in this episode. Follow Adam on Instagram at Ask Adam Torres for up to date information on book releases and tour schedule. Apply to become a featured co-author in one of Adam's upcoming books: https://www.moneymatterstoptips.com/coauthor --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/moneymatters/support
Psychiatric Nurse and Positivity Coach, Rayson Choo from Singapore joins Rajeev Mudumba for a conversation where he reveals his challenges & life experiences and what he did to turnaround while focusing on the positive. Rayson, through his brand, Raygacy, has made it his mission to help millennial entrepreneurs & professionals with personal branding and mastery. Rayson also hosts a podcast – The Raygacy Show where he gets to pick the brains of successful entrepreneurs and celebrities such as Gary V, Grant Cardone, etc. Rayson has gone through several setbacks including experiencing his parents’ divorce, constant bullying at age seven and losing his job and ex-girlfriend simultaneously at the age of 24. There was a point in life when he contemplated suicide! After his spectacular turnaround from depression, he has spoken to thousands of people in hospitals, schools, podcasts, and radio spreading his message of positivity. He has been featured in both local and international media.
Alex Lloyd speaks with the Axe Keeper of Her Majesty's Body Guard of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms, Tim Rayson. Life on the Line tracks down Australian war veterans and records their stories. Today's bonus episode is centred on UK military history, specifically about Her Majesty’s Body Guard of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms. Alex Lloyd spoke with Tim Rayson, the ‘Axe Keeper’, about the history of the Guard, battles and axes, and their royal duties today. This podcast was recorded in St James’s Palace, in London. The music at the end of the episode is “The Nearest Guard”, especially composed by Major Philip Shannon MBE for the 500th anniversary of the Honourable Corps on 4th June 2009. This recording was performed by the Band of the Irish Guards and supplied by the Axe Keeper. Tim returned to the podcast in the episode The Blind Man’s Victoria Cross with Tim Rayson. To see photos related to today's interview, visit our website - www.lifeonthelinepodcast.com - or follow us on social media: @lifeonthelinepodcast on Facebook and Instagram, and @LOTLpod on Twitter.
Karine Rayson, The Crew Coach joins us to chat about crew mental health, how different it can present in people, and what can be the trigger points, as well as reviewing the abc of first aid to help others in this position, and the various different supports people can turn to.
Psychiatric nurse and mental altitude coach Rayson Choo joined Alec Lifschultz for a conversation about mental health and mastering your mind. Rayson answered questions about what life as a psychiatric nurse entails and his personal beliefs about mental health. He also shared his R-E-L-A-X method for achieving mental wellness.
We need to know that in order to get to where we want to be, we need to surround ourselves with people who are already there. We need to seek out and ask questions to those who have already achieved our desired status or who have achieved our desired position in society. Rayson Choo, host of the Raygacy show, recently posted that one of his listeners commented that he (Rayson) should be financially successful before interviewing people like Gary Vaynerchuk and Grant Cardone - both of which have already been on Rayson's show and have encouraged him in many ways, and both have also agreed that what he is doing is fantastic and he should keep on keeping on! This is a total misconception, and today, I will tell you why. For show notes and transcripts, visit http://teaoflifepodcast.com/.
We need to know that in order to get to where we want to be, we need to surround ourselves with people who are already there. We need to seek out and ask questions to those who have already achieved our desired status or who have achieved our desired position in society. Rayson Choo, host of the Raygacy show, recently posted that one of his listeners commented that he (Rayson) should be financially successful before interviewing people like Gary Vaynerchuk and Grant Cardone - both of which have already been on Rayson’s show and have encouraged him in many ways, and both have also agreed that what he is doing is fantastic and he should keep on keeping on! This is a total misconception, and today, I will tell you why. For show notes and transcripts, visit http://teaoflifepodcast.com/.
We discuss how what we do now affects not just us but those around us. What will be said about us later? Are we making sure our current decisions are helpful to our future selves? Thank You so much Rayson Choo Follow me on Facebook: https://facebook.com/couponqueenpin001 follow me on YouTube Coupon Queen-Pin Any questions or comments can be left on the Facebook page or at shondy001@couponqueenpin.com I love hearing from you guys! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cqpmoments/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cqpmoments/support
Not only is traveling or adventuring with kids intimidating early on, it is even more daunting doing it alone. Today's guest, Belinda Baggs, is a professional surfer & soulful mama who has travelled the world with her son Rayson since he was 7 months old. SOLO. This mama believes in living out our own legacy as parents, & not worrying so much what society expects or thinks of us. Belinda speaks of the challenges & successes of living an ocean inspired, soulful life with a wee one in tow as well as being an ambassador for Patagonia Surf in Australia. Today she shares her tips for raising a water baby as well as living in alignment with our ocean environment. Go to https://www.soulmammas.com to read more on her story, show notes, take-aways and more! Also have you downloaded the new free pdf on 5 Self Care Tips for the New Year!? It's free! Go to the website & pick it up! Come on over to the Facebook Group & hear happenings from our community and follow me on Instagram where you will also receive episode updates, photos & audio clips!
Welcome to BehindThegrams Podcast - 005 - Special Guest Rayson Choo Rayson Choo Is from Singapore with such an amazing story of his mom going missing and his childhood being full of hard times! These hard times ended up shaping Rayson into the person he is today. Now he has grown to a entrepreneur chasing his passion in inspiring others with his Motivational Speaking, Branding influence, and Personal Mastery Coaching! Thank you very much for joining us here on BehindTheGrams where we dig into the stories, motivations and inspirations behind what we do as creators, artists, entrepreneurs, business owners or anyone in general chasing the pursuit of their potential. Show https://www.instagram.com/behindthegrams/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/behindthegrams/support
Rayson is the founder of Raygacy, a motivational speaker, and a practicing psychiatric nurse. He has been featured on numerous media such as The Straits Times, 93.8 Live, Lian He Zao Bao, to name a few. Rayson is on a mission to inspire 50,000 people in the world, creating more impact, legacy and joy by 2020 with the unique experience he has on Mental Health, Personal Mastery and Personal Branding. In this episode, Rayson talks about the value of personal branding, his quest to inspire 50,000 people and the importance of partnerships and collaborations. Consider becoming a Listener Supporter. Be a part of the Afflatus community and enjoy exclusive membership rewards. Full details here: https://bit.ly/2PFDUS8 Subscribe here: https://anchor.fm/theafflatus/support Follow The Afflatus: www.facebook.com/aalok.rathod www.facebook.com/unciafilms www.instagram.com/al_rathod Follow Rayson: https://sg.linkedin.com/in/raysonchoo --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/theafflatus/support
Huge shout out to RanurX and Jasmeek Singh for this amazing interview. Really grateful and honoured for it. In this episode, you'll learn more about my life story and how I overcame my challenges so as to become where I am right now. 'Amazing talk with Rayson Choo from Singapore. Rayson, apart from being a Psychiatric Nurse in Singapore, he is a founder and entrepreneur of his brand R-A-Y-G-A-C-Y as his dream is to build a legacy to help people who are living a "Hectic and Stressful Life" to achieve a "Peaceful and Happy Life" ' Jasmeek Singh --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theraygacyshow/message
Rayson Choo is the host of The Ragacy Show where he encourages others to become the best at who they are and what they do. After losing his job as a Japanese Clinic Nurse, along with experiencing other difficulties, including taking care of his mom who suffers from schizophrenia, Rayson was inspired to seek his passions. Through this, he also gained a deep desire to help and inspire others to chase their own dreams as well. Rayson believes that "...why some people thrive in challenging times while others don't is clearly distinguished between their mindset and choices." Rayson's desire is to inspire 50,000 people by the year 2020. Visit teaoflifepodcast.com for additional show notes and links.
Rayson Choo is the host of The Ragacy Show where he encourages others to become the best at who they are and what they do. After losing his job as a Japanese Clinic Nurse, along with experiencing other difficulties, including taking care of his mom who suffers from schizophrenia, Rayson was inspired to seek his passions. Through this, he also gained a deep desire to help and inspire others to chase their own dreams as well. Rayson believes that "...why some people thrive in challenging times while others don’t is clearly distinguished between their mindset and choices." Rayson's desire is to inspire 50,000 people by the year 2020. Visit teaoflifepodcast.com for additional show notes and links.
Fearless Asian Man - Advice for Asian men on Confidence, Dating, and Relationships
Learn how to rebuild your life and make it even more amazing after encountering setbacks. *** MAIN POINTS *** 00:30 – More points on how to build up your self-awareness and confidence 04:40 – The importance of surrounding yourself with the right people 05:28 – Why it’s important to read books 07:30 – Rayson’s story of hitting Read more about FAM 032: Rayson Choo (3/3) – How to rebuild your confidence and life[…] The post FAM 032: Rayson Choo (3/3) – How to rebuild your confidence and life appeared first on Asian Guy Transformation.
Paul Taylor is a Professor of Psychology at Lancaster University, Professor of Human Interaction at Twente University, and director of the Centre for Evidence and Research on Security Threats (CREST). He is interested in how people cooperate. Using experimental, archival and field research, he has studied both the fundamental behavioral and cognitive procsses that make human interaction possible and, more practically, the kinds of tactics and policies that promote peaceful resolutions. Research that Influenced Paul Abbott, A. (2001). Time matters: On theory and method. Chicago Press. Canter, D. V., and Heritage, R. (1990). A multivariate model of sexual offence behaviour: developments in offender profiling. Journal of Forensic Psychiatry, 1, 185-212. King, G. (1997). A solution to the ecological inference problem: Reconstructing individual behavior from aggregate data. Princetown University Press. Paul's Own Key Research Donohue, W. A., & Taylor, P. J. (2003). Testing the role effect in terrorist negotiations. International Negotiation, 8, 527-547. Jacques, K., & Taylor, P. J. (2013). Myths and realities of female-perpetrated terrorism. Law and Human Behavior, 37, 35-44. Prentice, S., Taylor, P. J., Rayson, P., Hoskins, A., & O’Loughlin, B. (2011). Analyzing the semantic content and persuasive composition of extremist media: A case study of texts produced during the Gaza conflict. Information Systems Frontiers, 13, 61-73. Taylor, P. J., Jacques, K., Giebels, E., Levine, M., Best, R., Winter, J., & Rossi, G. (2008). Analysing forensic processes: Taking time into account. Issues in Forensic Psychology, 8, 45-57.
Rayson Choo is a motivational speaker, nurse at the Institute of Mental Health in Singapore, and founder of his brand Raygacy. Rayson has gone through a series of setbacks such as experiencing his parents divorce, constant bullying at age seven, and even to the extent of losing his job and ex girlfriend simultaneously at the age 24. He has spoken to thousands of people in hospitals, schools, podcasts and radio. He has been featured in both local and international media. Going through his years of challenges, Rayson focused on the positive and he is resolved to aspire to inspire before he expires. He is obsessed about making a difference in people's lives by teaching them how to fulfil their life's purpose. And today, his vision is to inspire 20000 people in the world, creating more impact, joy and legacy by 2020. We talked about what he did to bounce back and about his experience as nurse at the Institude of Mental Health. Become a supporter of this podcast:https://anchor.fm/the-gratitude-podcast/support
Rayson Choo is a Psychiatric Nurse, and Inspirational speaker from Singapore. In this interview we hear about Rayson's life story. We find out what makes him tick, his thoughts on Self-awareness, as well as his recent experience meeting Gary Vaynerchuk. Raynson has a brand called Raygacy, which you can find out more at https://www.facebook.com/Raygacy/
A tale of two nurses – one with cancer and the other her caregiver. Actress Peri Gilpin reads the essay "White Knuckling" by Dr. Daniel Rayson. Cancer Stories host Dr. Lidia Schapira interviews Dr. Rayson about his inspiration for the piece. Read "White Knuckling" on JCO.org.
This week, our friend Rayson Esquejo, renowned food blogger and social media wizard, joins us for a chat about his work as well as the future of social technologies. In addition, Marvin follows up with more details about his Asian trip, Minji describes her own family's unique choice in vacation destinations, and the crew chats about professional cuddlers. Also pay attention to hear how you can win a copy of the Haikus with Hotties 2016 calendar! This week’s intro music is provided by Kollaboration Toronto Alum Plaitwrights Subscribe to us on iTunes, Stitcher, or via our RSS feed (http://kollaboration.libsyn.com/rss) Follow our guests at: Rayson Esquejo 2liveanddineinla.com @2LiveAndDine Follow our hosts at: @minjeeeezy @marvinyueh
Hannie Rayson delivers the inaugural Harold White lecture, reflecting on the public role of the writer and the reality of having to blog, post, be liked and followed, while really being 'the head-marketer for the brand called You.'
Playwright Hannie Rayson is a much-loved Australian institution. She made history when her stage hit Life After George became the first play to be shortlisted for the Miles Franklin Award, and her first major success, Hotel Sorrento was made into a feature film and is a staple of VCE reading lists. She has also written for television, including popular hit Sea Change. In her long-awaited memoir, Hello Beautiful, Hannie presents scenes from her own life, with all the insight, wit and narrative flair she has perfected in her plays. In this conversation with writer, director and broadcaster Lorin Clarke, she shares insights from this hilarious (and often dramatic) behind-the-scenes look at the life of an Australian success story. In partnership with Montalto Vineyard & Olive Grove.
Mike Rayson is an Aussie Pastor and Singer/songwriter based in the U.S. Mike shares the tragic story of the death of his son and how his family has coped through this tough time.