Podcasts about Rura

city in Uttar Pradesh, India

  • 44PODCASTS
  • 64EPISODES
  • 53mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Apr 11, 2025LATEST
Rura

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Rura

Latest podcast episodes about Rura

Du grain à moudre
Que reste-t-il de nos préjugés sur la jeunesse rurale ?

Du grain à moudre

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 38:45


durée : 00:38:45 - Questions du soir : le débat - par : Mattéo Caranta, Stéphanie Villeneuve - Films, enquêtes et récits dessinent une jeunesse rurale bien plus vivante, diverse et déterminée que les clichés persistants ne le laissent croire. Loin des images figées, les jeunes des campagnes expriment une réalité sociale riche, mais encore mal reconnue. - réalisation : François Richer - invités : Salomé Berlioux Entrepreneure social et essayiste, fondatrice et Directrice générale de l'association Rura (ex "Chemins d'avenirs"); Antoine Chevrollier Réalisateur et scénariste; Cédric Calandraud Photographe documentaire, enseignant à l'université Paris Cité en sociologie visuelle.

France Culture physique
Que reste-t-il de nos préjugés sur la jeunesse rurale ?

France Culture physique

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 38:45


durée : 00:38:45 - Questions du soir : le débat - par : Mattéo Caranta, Stéphanie Villeneuve - Films, enquêtes et récits dessinent une jeunesse rurale bien plus vivante, diverse et déterminée que les clichés persistants ne le laissent croire. Loin des images figées, les jeunes des campagnes expriment une réalité sociale riche, mais encore mal reconnue. - réalisation : François Richer - invités : Salomé Berlioux Entrepreneure social et essayiste, fondatrice et Directrice générale de l'association Rura (ex "Chemins d'avenirs"); Antoine Chevrollier Réalisateur et scénariste; Cédric Calandraud Photographe documentaire, enseignant à l'université Paris Cité en sociologie visuelle.

Les Voix des Solutions
Jeunes ruraux : pour une égalité des opportunités !

Les Voix des Solutions

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2025 26:19


Pour une égalité des opportunités !  10 millions de jeunes âgés de moins de 20 ans, pourtant absents des politiques publiques. C'est cette réalité de la jeunesse issue de territoires ruraux que j'ai souhaité explorer au micro des Voix des Solutions.  En raison d'un cumul d'obstacles — qu'ils soient structurels ou par manque d'information — l'accès à l'éducation supérieure et l'insertion professionnelle peuvent être de véritables défis pour de nombreux jeunes ruraux. Mobilité, financement, réseaux professionnels, ou encore manque de rôles modèles… c'est un écosystème à repenser pour offrir une réelle égalité des opportunités à celles et ceux qui portent l'avenir de leur territoire. Dans ce nouvel épisode, accompagnée par Salomé Berlioux, Fondatrice de l'association Rura, nous vous proposons d'interroger la prise en compte des enjeux de diversité territoriale par les politiques publiques et les acteurs économiques en France.  « Les territoires ruraux débordent de talents et d'énergie : il suffit de lever les freins pour permettre à chaque jeune de se réaliser. » Bonne écoute !Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 275 – Unstoppable Executive Nomad and Mindset Coach with Moustafa Hamwi

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2024 69:14


What a combination, but true for our guest Moustafa Hamwi. Moustafa grew up in the Middle East and then worked for companies such as Nokia as a major force in Marketing and PR.   In the 2010 timeframe Moustafa decided that his life was not being fulfilled with his career and left his job and purchased a one-way ticket to India where he decided to explore what he really wanted to do with his life. He will tell us his story and how he eventually found his calling as a coach, speaker and author.   Moustafa has many words of wisdom he imparts to us during his episode. I think you will find his observations relevant and worth hearing. He also gives us free access to the eBook version of his book The Slingshot.     About the Guest:   Moustafa is a bestselling author, international speaker, and mindset coach.   His background spans diverse disciplines — from executive coaching, hypnotherapy, yoga, and meditation to adventure sports and nature healing.   Moustafa's unique lifestyle as an executive nomad has him traversing the globe, often spending months living out of a campervan, immersing himself in diverse cultures and forging a deep connection with nature.   His quest for self-discovery leads him to learning and meditation centres worldwide, exploring the intricacies of mind, body, and soul. His life journey and extensive research have culminated in unparalleled knowledge and insight. He's globally recognised as a foremost expert and thought leader in reigniting passion within organisations and teams.   Ways to connect with Moustafa:   Linked in https://www.linkedin.com/in/moustafahamwi/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/moustafahamwi/ Book landing page to collect bonuses https://moustafa.com/slingshot/   The code to use for claiming the bonuses is “Unstoppable” I will explain more about the bonuses for your listeners when we speak     About the Host:   Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog.   Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards.   https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/   accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/   https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/       Thanks for listening!   Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below!   Subscribe to the podcast   If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can subscribe in your favorite podcast app. You can also support our podcast through our tip jar https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/unstoppable-mindset .   Leave us an Apple Podcasts review   Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts.       Transcription Notes:   Michael Hingson ** 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us.   Michael Hingson ** 01:21 Well, hello everyone, and welcome to unstoppable mindset from wherever you happen to be. I'm your host, Mike Hingson, and we are glad that you're with us today for another episode of unstoppable mindset today. Our guest is Moustafa Hamwi and Moustafa is, well, he has an interesting thing that he says about himself. He says that he is a unique he has a unique lifestyle. He's an executive Nomad, and he will tell us about that, among other things, but he is a best selling author, a mindset coach, and a number of other kinds of things. So I'm not going to give it all away. It's more fun to let him describe it and and kind of lead our conversation. So Moustafa, welcome to unstoppable mindset. We're really glad you're here.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 02:10 Thank you, Michael, for having me. I'm really excited to be on your show.   Michael Hingson ** 02:14 Well, thank you. We really appreciate you being here. And because you are an executive Nomad, where are you nomading From today?   Moustafa Hamwi ** 02:23 In the moment I'm in Melbourne. So I use Melbourne as a satellite base for kind of Asia and Australia, New Zealand. And then I use Dubai as a satellite base for Europe and kind of the Middle East area.   Michael Hingson ** 02:39 So where is home base. If you are at home base ever   Moustafa Hamwi ** 02:42 see last year, I decided to give up everything I own, downsize my life into two bags, one bag that has my formal stuff, one bag that has my casual stuff, and I pretty much gave up everything else that I own, took a camper van and started driving around Australia. So since then, I'm pretty much an executive, no matter just that home is where the heart is. So that's why I have two bases I use just as a central area to move from there. But yeah, depends on the day. What   Michael Hingson ** 03:10 made you do that? What made you decide to down so down size and not only take up that kind of lifestyle, but live in in the way that you do   Moustafa Hamwi ** 03:22 beautiful question. I mean that that has a lot of layers to it. I'd say my journey start of pursuing my own passion in life started at about 2008 when I was in events and nightlife, having an externally very successful life, but feeling empty on the inside. I started reading, researching, yoga, meditation, all of these things. 2012 bought a one way ticket to India. 2013 came back to Dubai, started delivering inspirational talks, and people would say, You changed my life. And this is really when I knew that that's my passion and purpose. However, also I realized from that trip that me, including, yeah, and a lot of other people. We burden ourselves with a lot of belongings. The mind is a hoarder, and we like to hoard stuff. We like to have stuff, but these things were weighing me down and not enabling me to move as much as I wanted to, and to travel and to explore, and especially that the speaking brought me a lot of joy from seeing different parts of the world and different people and different cultures. So I started, I put a mission for myself since about 2000 and probably 14. I said, every year I'm going to give away half of everything I owned unconditionally. The only condition is half has to go. I love it. I it belongs. It has memories. There's always half that doesn't have that criteria. So every year, half and funny enough, it took me about 10 years to get rid of almost everything I have last year due to a lot of reasons, including a lot of stress, a lot of things, I've been procrastinating that dream. Yeah, and obviously, pandemic did not allow a lot of movement, but last year, I literally woke up on them like, you know what time to do it? What's left is not too much anyway now and let me downsize and live light, so that enables me to be anywhere I want in the world. Where   Michael Hingson ** 05:15 did you house yourself during the pandemic?   Moustafa Hamwi ** 05:20 Whoa. Well, pandemic was an interesting period. Very challenging. Yeah, very well. It was very challenging for everybody. For me, however, I found a big challenge brought a lot of opportunities. Which one of them is what we're talking about today is actually my my latest book is slingshot,   Michael Hingson ** 05:40 right? So where did you? Did you move around a lot during the pandemic? Or were you in one place just because it became a little bit of a challenge and an issue to travel?   Moustafa Hamwi ** 05:51 Well, I came out of a divorce looking for a fresh start. Came to Australia, Melbourne, particularly, looking for just the reset. And I arrived here at about 20 Marsh 2020, which is just two days before Melbourne lockdown, and it became the longest lockdown on the planet. So yeah, was an interesting period. There wasn't a lot of movement outside four walls.   Michael Hingson ** 06:20 So with the lockdown, I'm just curious about hearing how it went in other parts of the world. Do you think the lockdown worked and really helped keep the pandemic from spreading worse than it could have?   Moustafa Hamwi ** 06:34 That's a very complicated conversation. Yeah,   Michael Hingson ** 06:36 I know it's, you know, and I don't know the answer. I'm just sort of curious. But   Moustafa Hamwi ** 06:40 my my personal opinion is No, I totally disagree. I think if anything, it did more damage to people than it then it helped, because the mental health, that pressure that it brought on people, including me, this is one of the experiences I had, is the fact that I thought, if I am a speaker and a coach and an author, and I work on mindset, and I do all of this stuff, and I found it very challenging to handle the pressure that this lockdown brought on me, especially extended period of of lockdown just made life a lot more difficult than it needed to be. So yes, it might have, if you really think at micro level, helped a little bit on reducing spread of a virus, which I think still very difficult because it's an airborne virus. But on the other hand, in the grand scheme of things, it's like trying to shoot a small bird with a bazooka. Yes, you might get the bird, but you've caused so much collateral damage that I don't think it was worth it   Michael Hingson ** 07:37 well, and that's it. Yeah, go ahead. Sorry.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 07:39 And that included, actually, that my father caught covid in Dubai, and he was hospitalized, and I did not get the chance to see him before he passed away, simply because of the lockdown. So really, how they put a price tag on that? Well, my dad caught covid Anyway, even during lockdown, but the extended lockdown meant I couldn't see my father. And the question is, well, what did that benefit me and I eventually, somehow, I ended up catching covid With all the lockdowns and getting sick and all of that. So were   Michael Hingson ** 08:06 there mask mandates or requirements in Melbourne? And yeah,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 08:10 Melbourne, Australia, was one of the most locked down cities in the world. That's that's a topic of discussion by itself. It's quite a it wasn't a pleasant place, and developed a very bad rep of the politicians that were running this place at that time. What about   Michael Hingson ** 08:23 the whole idea, though, of wearing masks? Did you think that that helped slow down or prevent some of the disease spread and or, or at least catching the disease? Blocking down is one thing, but I'm thinking of just wholly, i the whole idea of wearing a mask,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 08:43 again, very debatable. And I can't speak medically, I can tell you, on the level of mental health, pressure that it put on people, you pretty much sure so that made made breathing more difficult for a lot of people, put pressure on a lot of people. And it was through all of these experiences that I feel, if you're talking about a mask, is that put the pressure, lockdown, pressure, masks, all of these things started pushing me further into a place where I needed to find a solution. And this is where the journey of me writing slingshot came from,   Michael Hingson ** 09:14 and we will definitely get to that. I know that when the lockdown happened here, I had just gotten out of New York, where I was delivering a speech before the lockdown happened. In fact, I left early on a day earlier on a day that I was scheduled to leave just because of that, and I'm glad that I did. And for me and my wife, our situation with the lockdown was that she was in a wheelchair her whole life, and she also had rheumatoid arthritis, so she had an autoimmune disease. And so I think the lockdown, or at least, let me rephrase it, us being locked down, was probably a good thing, and we chose. Was to not worry about it a whole lot at the same time, it did affect me as a speaker, also, because I wasn't able to travel and speak, so I did look at other opportunities, which eventually also led to this podcast. I did some things virtually, and some speaking virtually, but now with the fact that my wife passed away in November of 2022 and we actually did a podcast about that in January of 2023 and I had somebody interview me about it. But we with her passing, I'm now starting to ramp up speaking again and working to find engagement. So that's a process, but we'll get there.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 10:42 Condolences, and I know this was a tough period for everybody, and losing somebody loved, a loved person close to us is never easy, and especially when it happened during a lockdown and during a pandemic. So   Michael Hingson ** 10:54 Well, again, it happened in 2022 so supposedly a lot of the pandemic has lifted. But I agree with you, I think that it's a very complicated issue, and I am very concerned that while covid is airborne, and while there are things that we can do that help lower the potential for death, all it takes is another mutation that we don't catch right away For that to all change, and and covid is certainly not something that has gone away yet. I don't buy the conspiracy theorists who talk about the fact that they're just injecting into us, ways of tracking us and things like that. I'm really not sensitive to to a lot of that, but I also recognize that there are all sorts of challenges. And children clearly had a lot of challenges with it, because they couldn't go to school and they didn't do things virtually as well. I think also, parents are needing to help that mindset, but, but that's, that's where we are, and you know, it will all, it will all be something that we'll just deal with as we can. I'm sure. I'm sure, yeah, tell us about the early Moustafa, growing up and all that that eventually led to where we are. But tell us about your maybe a little bit about your childhood and growing up, and what you did and all that before you adopted the lifestyle you have now.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 12:26 Oh, how far do we want to go so?   Michael Hingson ** 12:30 Well, whatever. I'll   Moustafa Hamwi ** 12:31 give you a bit of background. My I'm Syrian by birth. I moved to Saudi when I was two years old, which is where I spent most of my primary school, went back to Syria for a bit, and then studied my first year of uni in Jordan, then finished my uni in Egypt. And uni is University, okay, right, IO in Alexandria and Cairo, and then I went to Dubai to start my career in 2000 so that, and from there, it's been pretty much a long stint of 20 plus years in Dubai.   Michael Hingson ** 13:12 So what was your career initially, when you started after after university.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 13:18 So after I started my uni, my first job was a telesales operator, because it was the only job I could get. Funny, I came out of uni, I'm the guy who didn't have holidays or weekends. I was always studying, doing courses, doing internships, with the promise that one day I'll end up getting jobs and everything. And it was a big disappointment, because I came into the job market with a big CV, and all my friends were like, Mustafa was going to be the first guy who gets a job. I didn't even get a job interview. And it was a friend of mine who got my dream job, which is to be a marketing researcher. And he ended up passing on his his side gig, which was a telesales operator, to me as a favor. So you can imagine how that was. You know, as happy as I am for him, the question to me was like, What did I do wrong? What was wrong with me? And that, funny enough, put a lot of pressure on me to perform and figure out a way around. So I said, in one year from now on, I'm going to be working in a multinational. Took me about 13 months from starting that job to end up working in a multinational ad and advertising and public relations agency handling the PR for Nokia and the Middle   Michael Hingson ** 14:31 East. So you were doing marketing and PR, as opposed to sales for Nokia? Yes.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 14:36 So that was my the start of my proper career. It was in public relations for Nokia Showtime, Cisco and many other multinationals, and that pretty much gave me a lot of exposure to a lot of nightlife and events, because back in the days, I'm guessing yourself and anybody watching the show would be old enough to remember a Nokia phone.   Michael Hingson ** 14:55 Well, that was I was actually going to say that there was a process. It. Are you familiar with Ray Kurzweil?   15:02 Yes, of course. Okay,   Michael Hingson ** 15:04 so Well, the singularity. But long before that, he was the developer of omnifont, optical character recognition. And he developed a a machine that read out loud for blind people. And in the late 2009 2010 well, 2009 by that time, the software technology had evolved and hardware had evolved that he was able to put his reading software on originally, I think it was a Nokia N 82 and then it went to a couple of other Nokia phones as well. So for probably about three or four years, the Nokia phone was the main platform because it had not only enough memory, it had a high enough resolution camera, and you could load the character recognition software as well as a screen reader, so it would verbalize whatever came across the screen. And actually, I was the major distributor for it, and I worked with others and signed them as distributors in the United States. So we sold a lot of the, what we're called KNFB Reader mobiles in the United States, a lot of Nokia phones. Amazing,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 16:20 amazing. Yeah. Well, well, I mean, yeah, you know how big Nokia was at that time. And, yeah, Ray Kurzweil is phenomenal in the tech space, and you're right now that you mentioned, I remember he did have a lot of technology enabling visually impaired people to, you know, to consume data and information from the world around them. Yeah,   Michael Hingson ** 16:39 he, he did some really good things for blind and low vision people. And then, of course, later, he developed the, probably, I haven't heard anyone disagree with this best music synthesizer, and it still is the most about the most natural sounding one I think I've heard. And then he also was involved in voice recognition, which is cool. So he did a lot of really useful things,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 17:05 yeah, amazing stuff, amazing stuff. And it was more amazing the fact that it was on a Nokia, on a Nokia handheld,   Michael Hingson ** 17:11 yeah, yeah. But then Symbian eventually went away, or the the iPhone came along and was a lot more powerful, and then everything sort of migrated, and Nokia was also, I don't know whether they were making bad decisions, but a lot of things were happening that made it much less popular than than it had been. Yeah, but so, so how long did you work for Nokia and the other companies like that?   Moustafa Hamwi ** 17:36 So I was handling the PR for Nokia in the Middle East for a couple of years, and during that period, I got exposed to all the nightlife and events because they were the sponsor for all these beautiful things, and that made me one of the most popular guys in Dubai, because I had backstage access to every single event that was happening. And that meant that I eventually started partying. More and more, started throwing after parties. And next thing I know, I decided to leave the company I'm working for and open up my own event agency. And that led me, that led me to go growing my business from four people, 45 people, multi million dollar turnover, and my life got crazier and crazier. Daytime, we're doing conferences, seminars, events and nighttime. We're sponsoring concerts and parties and things like that.   Michael Hingson ** 18:27 That must have been quite a challenge and tearing you in so many different directions.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 18:33 Well, it was, it was exciting for a young guy in his 20s to have that, you know, a video clip lifestyle, but Asher, while it did burn me out, and it made me reflect on a lot of things in life, first and foremost was, what am I doing with my life? What, like all of this fine is short term, short lived joys, but they're not fulfilling at all, and they don't make me feel better by the day, if anything, day by day, they start becoming less enjoyable, and they start making me feel emptier and emptier. And this eventually led me to leave everything behind and buy a one way ticket to India on a search, on a soul search journey finding passion and purpose.   Michael Hingson ** 19:17 Yeah. Well, you finally discovered was that all that nightlife stuff and all the other things that you were doing were great, but where was it really getting you? Mustafa,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 19:28 it was, I mean, look, I was making money, I was partying and everything, but it was fulfilling me. It wasn't getting me far. It wasn't getting me far. That's, that's really sometimes, sometimes the biggest challenges in life, side of the biggest blessings in hindsight, and when we're able to go through the experience, we realize that there's something in it for them that makes us ask deeper questions. And that's   Michael Hingson ** 19:50 the issue, and that's what I was getting at, is that in reality, all that other stuff, all that physical stuff and so on, was was fine, but. And as you said, Where does it really get you, and how is it really helping you emotionally and your your your inner self, the inner musafa, and it wasn't really helping that at all   20:11 100%   Michael Hingson ** 20:12 so you went to India. What did you do in India?   Moustafa Hamwi ** 20:17 Well, it was just, I remember what my mom called me. She's like, What are you doing? I said, I quit my job and I'm buying a one way ticket to India. She's like, are you crazy? What are you going to do in India? I said, I don't know. I'm going to go get lost. It was one of those things where I did not know, but I knew I had to go in that direction. It was an intuition to go to India, but I did not know exactly what I was looking for. I was looking for an answer. Obviously, yeah, no answer for what. And along the journey, I met by coincidence or a universal alignment, a guru or Swami, who had been in caves for 13 years. He had been meditating in solitude in caves for 13 years, and he had came out a few years before I met him, and in one of the interactions with him, I'm asking him about life, meaning of things, and so on. And he goes to me, he used to play with his beard. He goes, Hmm, do you know what you are thirsty for? Because if you do not know what you are thirsty for, you cannot quench your thirst. And that was a big aha for me, like I'm searching for an answer, but I never actually focused on what the question is. And a realization since then, till today, especially when I got into coaching, the real value is in the question. The best thing you can do is ask a question, because a well thought, well designed question gives you a valuable answer, and at that time, I did not know what I was looking for throughout my journey. Then a few months later, I end up, coincidentally, walking into a hospital getting myself checked up, and I discover I had a medical condition that was labeled non curable, and that freaked me out, because I had to reflect and ask myself, What if this was a cancer? What if this was something that was going to end my life? You know, what? What meaning that I have in my life? Did my life have any value? And reflecting on that, I realized that the answer to the question of, What am I thirsty for? The answer was, I'm thirsty for impact, to be able to know that I have left a positive impact on this planet. So then I 2013 I ended up buying a ticket back to Dubai, and I started delivering inspirational talks called Cavalli to Manali, which is talking about the journey of going from the Cavalli club nightlife in Dubai into Manali, where I met my Swami, and a few months later, a random person sees me sitting in a cafe in Dubai and just walks up to me, goes, Hey, you're that speaker guy. I said, Yeah. He goes, you did there talk about India? I said, Yeah, he goes, You changed my life. And that was an aha moment for me of ah, the answer to the question is, I am seeking impact in my life, and I know I can have impact by sharing my story, by doing inspirational talks and by doing coaching.   Michael Hingson ** 23:05 Yeah, I absolutely relate to what you're saying. Because as I tell people after September 11 and escaping from the World Trade Center, and people started asking me to come and tell my story, and they wanted to hire me to do it. As I say, I decided that selling life and philosophy was a whole lot more rewarding and a lot more fun than selling computer hardware. Yeah, I have to earn a living at it, and I had a wife who needed me to earn an income as well, and I still need to do that, but the rewards and when people tell you how you've changed their life, those kinds of comments really are what it's all about, as you well know, 100 100%   Moustafa Hamwi ** 23:54 and sometimes we feel we are as inspiring as We think we are, and until we meet the next inspiring person. So the reality is not that I am inspiring in the absolute is just that I've had an inspiring experience. However, since I got on this journey, I realized that there's so many more inspiring people, more than me, and literally, until we spoke last time before the episode and you told me your story, I'm like, Wow, here you go. There's one more. And what I love about this being in this industry is actually the amazing surroundings and people that you hang around and you communicate with. But this is not to say that someone who's not in the industry is not inspiring. I feel I've had so many experiences where I've been inspired by some of the most normal, average day experiences, because they also remind us to that the passion and purpose is a day to day pursuit. It's not just about a mission of changing someone's life, because a mother who's sacrificing and dedicating her life to her children is is as inspiring, if not more inspiring, absolutely   Michael Hingson ** 24:57 and um. You know, I think for me, the the issue is that I love to meet people. I think everyone inspires me to some degree, some more than others, and there are some that I don't need to ever meet, just observing them, if they inspire other people, that's that's fine. But I also think that it's important that as we inspire, as we speak, as we do, the things we do, all of those affect our lives. And so every inspiration, every time we meet someone, it affects us, and I think it helps us. I was going to say, codify, but it helps us more specifically understand what our philosophy is, and it helps clarify it, and helps us move forward. And I think that's very important,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 25:53 100% 100% it is. I there's a there's a saying in Arabic. I'll try to translate to English, but it says the wisdom is the PERS is the Holy Grail, and pursuit of the wise, wherever they might find it, they will grab it. So really, any any experiences that would help, any interactions that would help us as a person and as a human being grow is really the pursuit should be the pursuit of every, everyone,   Michael Hingson ** 26:24 yeah, and, and if we can contribute to that in one way or another, then that's great for For my part, I don't try to quantify how inspiring I am. My goal is to inspire where I can, and I know that not everyone who hears me necessarily goes away and will be as inspired as other people, but they're probably looking for other things. On the other hand, I know that I have contributed to inspiring some people. There was an article, oh well, I delivered a speech in 2014 and last year, somebody wrote an article about that talk and said some very positive and kind and nice things about my talk. And I love to say to people, how many times do you remember a speaker nine years later and decide to write about him so he must be doing something right, and what what I do right is what other people feel I'm doing right, and as long as as they feel that, then I'm going to continue to do what I can do. And certainly my message will evolve over time as your message evolves over time, as we learn more. That's very important in what it's all about,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 27:36 100% 100% and it is a journey, not a not a goal, I think, correct the whole conversation about mindset, you know, and kind of a beautiful segue into talking about mindset. Here is when I was talking to you last time, and then I, you know, was talking about my book and the mindset and everything, and you talked about your experience, you know, leaving the Trade Center during the 911 or escaping more, more than leaving, you know, and I asked you, how challenging was it for you? You actually gave me a huge mindset shift talking about that. Probably that was a more natural environment for you, not not being able to see, compared to someone like me, who's used to to external visual references, to be able to find my way, you probably had better chances and better mindset being able to deal with with everything that was going around you, which was very impressive, and a mindset shift for me just having that conversation with you. Well,   Michael Hingson ** 28:38 I think it's important, though. The the other part about that is, and as I think I explained a little bit, I spent a fair amount of time learning all that I could about the World Trade Center, what to do in an emergency, where all of the exits were, what the process was. And so, whereas sighted people typically want those visual cues. I knew that if I were ever in an emergency in the building, and what started that was that, of course, there was a bombing there in 1993 it wasn't something that caused a lot of damage, but it had happened, right? And so the bottom line is that being in that building now, right, there have now been something that happened, and there could be something else that happens. So I needed to know, and also I was the leader of that office, and so it was important for me to make sure I knew all I could, because it might very well be that we would find ourselves in a situation where there weren't visual cues for people smoke and other things like that, which we didn't really have in the building that day, but still we we could have, and it taught me how to be more observant. So for example, when we got into the stairwell, I began smelling an odor, and it took me about three or four floors to realize I was smelling the fumes from burn. Jet fuel. None of us had any idea what really happened. The airplane hit 18 floors above us on the other side of the building. And as I love to tell people, the last time I checked Superman and X ray vision were fictitious, so none of us knew what happened. And in fact, none of the people on the stairs from all the offices where we were and that we we and with the people we encountered, hundreds of people all the way down. No one knew, because we were all on the other side of the building. And so I smelled this odor, and it took me a while to suddenly realize I'm smelling the fumes from burning jet fuel. And I observed that to other people, and they said, Yeah, we were trying to figure out what that is. We must have been hit by an airplane, but we didn't know why. We didn't know any of the details, but again, it's learning to pay attention to the details, and it's really learning to have all the knowledge that we can possibly have. Visual cues are really lovely as far as they go, but that's visual cues that don't necessarily really point to the level of knowledge that we can have if we focus on maybe learning how to deal with an emergency as a blind person should. And I say it that way because I know of a lot of blind people who don't take the time to do what what I did, and so they might very well be in a fearful situation, but that was my makeup, and that's what I chose to do.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 31:21 Amazing.   Michael Hingson ** 31:23 And, you know, I think it's important, and I think in fact. And so the article talked about some of that, and I've given a number of speeches on emergency preparedness and safety, and talk about the fact that people need to learn about what to do in an emergency. Don't rely on reading science, because that may or may not work for you. And there have been a few situations where after giving a talk like that, people have come up to me like somebody who is involved in running a power company for a state, and he said, you raise a really good point. We're going to figure out, we want your help to figure out a way that the people can evacuate from our generating stations, our electric generating stations, if there's a fire and there's smoke, so that they can't see where the signs are, to tell them where the emergency exits are. And we figured that out.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 32:16 Wow, amazing.   Michael Hingson ** 32:18 It is. It is part of what, what we need to do. So again, I'll contribute where I can. I'm not an expert on electric generator plants, but I know what I did, and if I can help people and and inspire them that way, that's great. But you know, we all have our experiences, and hopefully we can contribute and and help other people. And that's what it's about, of course,   32:44 beautiful.   Michael Hingson ** 32:46 So for you, I want to go back to your Swami said, What are you thirsty for? Did you have an answer for him? Or how did you deal with that at the time?   Moustafa Hamwi ** 32:56 Well, at the time, I did not have an answer what. What ended up happening, obviously, is what I just mentioned earlier, is that my journey of first discovering I had a medical condition, and I had to ask myself, well, if this was a cancer, if it was undiscovered now and could have turned into a cancer, would have I been proud of my life and what that was? And the answer was, Well, what I was thirsty for is to have meaning and to have impact, but I did not know how I'm gonna do it. And eventually, the experience in Dubai of somebody saying, You changed my life made me understand that. The how, so, the what, the what was impact and the How was speaking, coaching and sharing my story. Did   Michael Hingson ** 33:40 you ever get to go back and tell your guru what you discovered?   Moustafa Hamwi ** 33:46 I actually not. I discovered I got to see him again on the same journey while I'm still in India. And actually, that's why I went back to him after I discovered I'm seeking purpose. At that time, I did not discuss that with him, because, remember, I was still dealing with my own medical condition. So my priority was me, because as much as Yes, of course, we want to help, but the reality is, I can't help anybody if I'm dead, so I my priority was healing and dealing with my own stuff and and I spent a lot of time with him, but that was not a, not a conversation I had with him, as much as reflecting deeper and deeper and a lot of other things in life with him. But   Michael Hingson ** 34:24 that question really did change your life in so many ways over time. 100% Yeah, which is, which is, of course, probably what, what he intended, as long as you were willing to think about it, and clearly you were so that was great, yep. So you know a lot of us, I believe that as we go through life, we make choices, and I love to realize that I can trace a lot of where I am. A day, back to choices that I made some time ago and the choices that brought me here, for example, whatever that is. But in dealing with our past and dealing with choices, is that an important thing to do, or do we just forget our past and we just live in the moment? Beautiful   Moustafa Hamwi ** 35:19 question, and what you're asking about is kind of the whole premise and trigger behind my book slingshot. And the analogy of Slingshot is that, yes, we do need to go and take a step back to deal with our past, but only enough to discover what is holding us back, but then we have to let go of that so we can slingshot into the future. So the answer is not an absolute yes or not an absolute no, it is a yes. And how do we move on after we take that step back? Otherwise, we get stuck in the past, which happened to me for a while, while I was stuck in the space of healing, and all the healing space does is dig deeper and deeper. And it's like peeling an onion. You take one layer out and there's another layer and another layer and another layer, and that alone becomes an addiction. So reality is, yes, take a step back, but let go so you can accelerate into the future. So   Michael Hingson ** 36:15 how does the healing process then actually work?   Moustafa Hamwi ** 36:20 One, of the biggest elements of healing and growth in life is actually awareness. So the first step is, is if we're if one is able to step back and face the reality of what happened. And one system I use in slingshot the book is actually we ask people to write their story first. So the way we do it, and I can do it here is with you, is ask, okay, if your life was a movie, what genre would it be? Okay? And then you'd put a name to that movie. So you say, okay, my the genre of my life is, I'll give you an example. The genre of my life was at a period when everything was not going well in my life, and losing my business and so on. The genre was a sad drama, and the title of my movie was dreams broken on the shores of reality. I mean, I say it now and I laugh at it, but at that time, I was very depressed, sitting in and staring into the horizon, at every sunset, going, Oh, my life, everything is not working. And then, and then, the story of my life was, I'm a failure because of my upbringing, because I didn't have a good English education. I didn't have a proper university education. I had a uni, but it wasn't a, you know, something that is inspiring, and all these stories that the outside world fills into our head. And I was looking for an excuse for any failed experience which is not failure in the ultimate and then reframe that story and through the exercises that go through the book. So what happened is, by reframing a lot of those stories, the genre of my movie changed from a sad drama into an adventure, and then the title of my movie was an adventure of a lifetime, a life to die for. So then suddenly that little mental shift and reframing of the story showed me the best side of the life that I'm living and allowed me to capitalize on the opportunities. Yeah,   Michael Hingson ** 38:15 I hear what you're saying. Well, go ahead,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 38:19 yeah. So I'd say this is a simple exercise we can give to any listeners to really start by asking yourself, if life, my life was a movie, what genre would it be? And be honest with yourself, because the healing element here does not work. So if I was to pretend that I'm in, that I'm positive about my life, I don't believe positivity works. It's a bunch of bollocks, because positivity, if you're not truly inspired from inside, is just putting makeup on something. It doesn't change the reality of what that thing is. We have to face, honor and acknowledge and understand that we are sad, that we are upset, that we are angry, that we are hurt. These are all natural emotions and the challenge is throughout now this industry, unfortunately, the self help industry, people are are feeding people. No, you got to be positive, and you got to be this, and you got to be that. You can only be what you are congruent with. And that has to come from genuineity, from authenticity and from truth. And if your truth and genuineity and authenticity in that moment is sadness, then honor it, because you can only resolve some emotions, or the emotions and emotions you have. You can only resolve them when you go through them, not over them. You know when they say, get over it. You cannot get over it. You have to get through it. And once you get through it, you dissolve it, and then healing can happen. It's like, if you have, if you have something under your skin that's a an infection that is so bad that it's starting to develop pus. The only way to heal it is to actually cut it open, clean it and then stitch it again. If you try to ignore it, it doesn't work. So really, awareness is a big element in any healing journey. Me.   Michael Hingson ** 40:01 For me, I kind of view positivity a little bit different than I think you're describing, and I appreciate what you're saying. I think that positivity is, in a sense, focusing on dealing with the things that are going to help you advance and trying to not focus so much on the negative things that you can leave behind you. Maybe another way to put it is so many of us worry about so many different things, and most of the time we don't have any control over them, if we would just focus on the things that we can control and leave the rest alone, we would be a lot more productive and a lot less stressful in our lives.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 40:48 I totally agree with you, however, I would still want to debate that the positivity conversation, and I'll ask you a simple question and to anybody who's listening, would you consider yourself a glass half empty or glass half full guy,   Michael Hingson ** 41:03 I guess I would probably view myself more as a glass half full guy than a glass half empty guy. Beautiful,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 41:09 and I'll tell you I personally disagree or and I would tell you you're probably not that, and I'll explain why. Okay, I'm I'm a guy who says the glass is half empty half full. And how can I fill the empty this is by that, yeah, so you are the guy who's practical. And practicality versus positivity are two different stories, because what happens sometimes people who are just focusing on the positivity never also understand where they need to develop and they they need to grow, and they become stale, right? And that it's just a labeling conversation that we're having. Of course, yes, it is attitude, and of course, you gotta look at the glass half full. And if you focus, if you focus on the negativity in your life, you'll never get, get get out of that. But also, equally, if you don't acknowledge and understand that these things require growth, then you also never grow there. So it's a, it's not a, it's not a black or white conversation. It's a conversation of totality, of looking at the half full and half empty. Otherwise people get mis eluded, and that's why I keep talking about the self help industry, because it it sells a lot better to talk about positivity. People don't want to hear about the hard work they have to do to fill in half of the glass. Nobody wants to talk about, okay, you talk about positivity, but nobody understands that the level of hard work, as you said, you had to go through to be prepared to deal with situation where you're not getting visual cues, because you had to depend on other things that took work that didn't happen by itself. So what I talk about here is not just the positivity, it's the totality of the approach of being truly realistic and honoring that the struggles in your life do bring their own opportunities, and they allow you to grow only when you own them rather than ignore them. Yeah,   Michael Hingson ** 42:51 and again, for me, and as I was describing, the whole concept of positivity is really dealing with the negativity that we focus on so much that we don't need to have around us if we choose to deal with it and we can, there are things that go on that are challenges to us, but we have the choice of dealing with those challenges, and I think that's the important thing, as I tell people we had no control over September 11 happening, and I am not convinced that all the communications between all the government agencies would have figured it out in the US having read the September 11 report. But what we all have control over, and all had control over, is how we deal with September 11, and we can choose to deal with it as a horrible thing, and it was a horrible thing, but we could choose to deal with it in a very negative way in our lives, or we can learn and grow from it. And I think that's the issue of making a choice that helps move us forward and get away from the negative stuff. And I met some people who are very negative after September 11, and I could see years later that they were locked in a mindset that wasn't ever going to help them be more productive and help them grow   Moustafa Hamwi ** 44:13 beautifully said. And it's that mindset conversation about how to really not get stuck in your past story. However, I only talk about the mindset mastery as a second stage to the healing. And the healing is what requires us to look at the half empty so we can acknowledge what needs to work and then work on the half full. And in that, we'll have a totality of a full glass that that is always serving us, and never get stuck in diving into negativity layer after layer after layer. So it's always a yin and yang approach. It's a coherent approach. So agree on that point.   Michael Hingson ** 44:50 Yeah, it's, you know, it still becomes an issue of of growth and of choice and and I would never say. You don't pay attention to the negativity part. You've got to know that it's there before you can deal with it. And it's it's more an issue of, again, the choices that we make, and I agree with you, mindset is a part of it. And you can talk about, oh, I got this mindset. Well, do you really, how is that helping you advance, do you really have it? And it's it's so often the case that people talk a good talk, but they're not really walking it, and which is part of the problem,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 45:29 100% and not just that. It's actually having the courage and the humility to acknowledge where we are now and then working towards where we want to be. Otherwise, it's fake. It's just all the Rura hooha motivational Yes, yes, yes. You can do it. You can do it. Yeah. Well, guess what? I do a lot of extreme sports, and one of them is skydiving. Skydiving means opening the airplane door at 13,000 feet and jumping out if I don't acknowledge that. One of the things is, I'm not a bird, and I don't have wings, and for me to do that, I have to have a parachute. So so in a way, it is a it is a weakness, not to have a wings, but then when I acknowledge it and I understand it, then the strength, there's the design and the engineering that goes behind the parachute that I have to make sure it's strapped onto me, that have to make sure it's ready. Allows me now to complete that picture of the glasses half empty, where I'm not a bird, but with the parachute, my glass becomes half full,   Michael Hingson ** 46:27 right? And and the joy of skydiving, I've never done it, that's okay, but the joy of skydiving and the experience and what you see when you're doing it and you land and so on. That fills up a lot of the rest of the glass, for the moment,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 46:46 100% it's a beautiful it's one of those amazing experiences that I'd highly recommend you do. I   Michael Hingson ** 46:51 want to do it someday. I just haven't. I haven't tried it. It is, it is a doable thing. I know some blind people who have done   Moustafa Hamwi ** 46:59 it. I mean, I mean, you do a tandem anyway, the first job. So maybe this is your cue. Somebody will be strapped onto you, and they will, yeah, yeah. And   Michael Hingson ** 47:05 the other blind people who I know did it in tandem, and that's fine. I'm I still get to experience it. And I I've done a number of things like that. I've flown an airplane and and flew it for about an hour. The trick is, as I tell people, you just stay high enough that you don't hit the mountains and you're good,   47:26 amazing, and it works. And   Michael Hingson ** 47:29 I've driven a car and some other things like that, although I had some directions, that's the technology is getting better, not autonomous vehicles, but literally, it is. It is possible. There is technology so that a blind person can drive a car. If you ever want to explore that, there's a website. It's called www dot Blind Driver challenge.org, and you can actually see a car that was developed with the technology so that a person who is blind can get behind the wheel and truly get the information to drive the car. And I, I did the simulator, but I haven't driven the car, but again, a lot of adventures. I've traveled to a number of countries, and I travel alone, and it's part of what I do, and I love doing it and inspiring people. And I've spent a number of days in countries where I don't speak the language, and we had to rely on an interpreter to help with doing a speech. But it, it's so fun and so rewarding when, again, people come up and say, we really appreciate what you say   Moustafa Hamwi ** 48:35 amazing.   Michael Hingson ** 48:37 So it's, it's, it's a lot of fun. Well, tell us a little bit more about slingshot and what makes slingshot and your methodology different than other things.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 48:49 A beautiful question. Michael, it's basically the practicality of it, as as you figured with this conversation about you know, half full or half empty. My my my approach is very pragmatic and practical. So I always like to have things that number one are coherent. So slingshot really offers the healing and the mindset mastery together, the schools of thought out there generally have been kind of, you know, unipolar in a way, where they're either they're either trying to talk about coaching, which is just go, go, go mentality. You can make it. You can do it. It's all in your mind, or other schools that are just healing. And let's dig into the past, and let's be in the feeling. But that is a never ending journey. You don't know how deep the rabbit hole goes. This book offers a coherent approach where you take a step back to heal, and then you release to mindset master. The second thing that makes the approach in the book slingshot special is that it is also results driven, because myself, I've struggled a lot throughout my journey with a lot of you know, self proclaimed goo. Gurus and coaches and things like that, that promise the sun, the moon and the sky, but don't deliver results. So I've always promised myself, whenever I deliver something, it'll be measurable results. So everything in the book is structured. You read on one page, but then the practical it's not just theory. The practice is on the other page. You fill in the blanks, and you yourself will get immediate results in that moment to understand it. And third thing is that it is actually a continuous journey. So the kind of books I offer are not just theory. They're practical, and they entice you to reuse them all the time. So what happens is, okay, you do one exercise at a certain point of time, but that doesn't mean it's not a one time transformation. You get immediate results. But I say in the last chapter of the book, I say, keep brushing your teeth, and that's an analogy of you can go to the doctor to get teeth whitening, but if you don't brush your teeth daily, you don't get the consistent results. And the same thing with the book that I offer, it's a companion that allows people to consistently keep working with the book at any stage of life when they're having challenges. And   Michael Hingson ** 51:01 that makes sense to have a way to keep being able to go back and re examine whatever it is that that is guiding you along the way. And you have to do that. I think that any decent book or any decent kind of instruction that we allow ourselves to do has to be something where we can continue to do it. It isn't just a one time thing, 100% so that that makes a lot of sense. Well, you know, we're always talking about mastering our destiny and and really becoming a whole lot better than than we are. And we've also talked about the mindset. Why is it important to master your mindset on the way to mastering your destiny? If that's a relevant question to ask   Moustafa Hamwi ** 51:48 amazing question, Michael and I'll give you a simple example. What what mindset does is minds. Our mindset impacts our behaviors, and our behaviors impact our actions, and our actions impact the results. And naturally, the results feed our mindset so and that becomes either a positive loop or a negative loop. When our mindset is inspired, using your terminology, positive, I'd like to call it more inspired, determined in a mastery state, then we behave in that way, and our probabilities of taking inspired actions increases, and as the actions increase, probability of success increase. And then the more we succeed, then we start reaffirming ourselves that we are really successful. But the same thing can happen in negative way, because if we're having a negative attitude, we will not do our best, and when we don't do our best, the results probably will not be the best, which then reaffirms that things do not work for us, and it becomes a negative feedback loop. And if you think about the importance of a mindset, it's like a car driver. Imagine a supercar. Okay, what's what's your favorite? Talking about cars, what would be your favorite supercar.   Michael Hingson ** 53:01 Oh, gosh, um, not me much of a driver. Um, oh, I'll just say a Cadillac. What the heck?   Moustafa Hamwi ** 53:11 Okay, let's, let's say a super Cadillac. Yeah, the racing Cadillac has, I think it's a scene.   Michael Hingson ** 53:15 Let's say a Ferrari. Okay, that's more racing. So we'll say a Ferrari. Let's   Moustafa Hamwi ** 53:19 take a Ferrari. Okay, let's take a red Ferrari. Typical, typical image in people's head is a red Ferrari. Yeah, okay, so take a Ferrari. Now imagine that Ferrari being driven by your average taxi driver. How much will he or she be able to get out of the Ferrari like an average taxi driver can get out of a taxi. Now imagine the same Ferrari, same red color, driven by Michael Schumacher, being a professional race driver, he will get 110% out of that car, same car, same color, same everything. Two different drivers, two different results.   Michael Hingson ** 53:55 I would only say if you're comparing it to New York tab drivers, some of those guys are pretty good, but I'm just being silly. Go ahead,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 54:02 yeah. I mean, yes, but still I hear what you're saying. No, I hear what you're saying nowhere near as good. I mean, they're probably get skidding with it and move fast, but they would never be as good as somebody who never seconds. And the reality is, in between those two, the driver is the mindset. So the same you split Mustafa into two, and you put a taxi driver in to drive this as driving a taxi, and you put then a professional Formula One driver, the driver of the Mustafa's, the one that's driving more professional, will get professional results. And that's how life goes on. So that's why it's very important for us, for us to master our mindset in the pursuit of mastering destiny. Now how I discovered that is when I was doing my work with passion, early on in my speaking career. So about 10 years back, with the live passionately book, I would help people discover their passion and. Would know with absolute certainty, this is it. What I want to do. I want to do this. I want to pursue that. It's going to make me fulfilled. But then self doubt kicks in, and anxiety, fear, limiting beliefs, and suddenly they would quit on their dream before they even start, because they're so scared of the outcome, and their mindset is not ready. So suddenly they've got a dream of a Ferrari but a mindset of a rickshaw or a tuk tuk or a small car, and then they're never able to accelerate their life. So without that mindset upgrade, people don't go very far in life, or even if they stay where they are and convince themselves I'm happy. Pandemic has taught us that nobody's immune to challenges in life, because even when everybody thought they're immune, everybody got it tough and during pandemic. So reality life is going to hit hard sooner or later, and the more our mindset is upgraded and prepared, the better for us.   Michael Hingson ** 55:55 And the other part about that, let's go back to the cab driver and Michael Schumacher, the reality is, with a mindset, you can develop and change your mindset and develop a different mindset. So it is certainly possible, depending on the drive of the cab driver and his motivations or her motivations, they might develop the skills to be a professional race car driver, but they have to work at it, 100%   Moustafa Hamwi ** 56:23 100% there's that that funny story of every overnight success takes 10 years. People only see the final outcome, but they don't see how much work it took that person to prepare and train. It's the 10,000 hours that we all have to put in. And people have that dream, have that aspiration, but don't have the mental tenacity to stay at it, day in day out, to reach their goal. And this is where mindset mastery becomes very important.   Michael Hingson ** 56:49 How do people develop this kind of mindset mastery methodology, and how do they develop the ability to master their mindset?   Moustafa Hamwi ** 56:59 Beautiful question, and that part of the second part of slingshot the book, answers with a lot of exercises. However, I will give a couple of exercises that would make it easy for anybody listening to apply a little bit of those. So first question I like to ask people is, actually, what would you regret if you did not pursue your passion. So what is that regret? So if you say, I'm dreaming of becoming a speaker, a coach and an author, because I struggled with that at the beginning, remember I didn't fly out of India to become who I am today. I struggled with that, with that self limiting beliefs. So if you ask yourself, what would I regret by not pursuing that dream or that passion that would   Michael Hingson ** 57:43 I would and my answer would be, I would regret not knowing how far I could take it and what I could do with it. Beautiful,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 57:50 beautiful. And then you keep going. So what you do is, I want a long list. I want at least 10 or 12, a list of 10 or 12 items. So you keep showing going, Okay, I'm not going to discover how far can I go? I I will, I will. I will be, I will be sad. I will lose my self confidence, because then, you know, I've doubted myself, and   Michael Hingson ** 58:09 I'll always wonder, what if, what is, which is that's me, but that's what I would do? Yeah, everybody,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 58:16 not just you, because that's where, that's what happens, is the regret for what we did not do is bigger than the regret, and then we   Michael Hingson ** 58:23 talk ourselves into having taken that position, well, I wouldn't have been able to succeed. How do you know,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 58:28 deep inside, we know this is yes, exactly right. People will when you question yourself, you will lose confidence in yourself, and that's the negative self limiting belief cycle that I talked about. So what happens is you put that list of what, what would I regret if I did not pursue my passion? And then that gives you a motivation away from so you run away from that ugly space of you know, regrets, right? Then I give another exercise, and I say, What's the best that could happen if you pursue that passion and that goal? So that gives you a motivation too. So one regret is I would never know how far I could go. So now if I ask you, what's the best scenario if you pursue that passion, I succeed. You succeed. And then deposit what are the positive outcomes there. People   Michael Hingson ** 59:21 ask me to speak. They tell me that I changed their life, beautiful.   Moustafa Hamwi ** 59:25 So you get to speak, you get to change people's lives. You get to travel. You get to explore the world. And then you put that list. So now you've got a motivation too. So you've got one motivation away from the regret, one motivation towards the aspiration. And typically, there's a blockage there of but what if this does not work? Then I ask people to write a list of what's the worst that could happen if you pursue that goal or passion. So let's say you decided to speak, what's the worst that could happen?   Michael Hingson ** 59:55 I didn't get many speaking engagements. I wasn't able to change. Change lives,   Moustafa Hamwi ** 1:00:00 and I and then I didn't charge as much as I could charge, and I didn't charge as much as I could have charged, right? And then you put that list, and then, then this is a list where I'd say, Well, get over it. What? So what? So what if you didn't get as many speaking gigs, you just keep marketing and promoting. So what if you couldn't charge as much as you want, you just keep working till you can raise your prices over time. So what if you did not inspire the millions that you thought you would? Well, guess what? Inspiring one person is as good as inspiring a million. It's still a life that you have changed. So once we put all of these stories that you know, that we tell ourselves, of why I don't want to do so that away from that, what am I? What would I lose by not pursuing the passion? And then what would I gain by pursuing that passion? And what's the worst that could happen if I pursue that passion or goal? Those three things are the simplest excerpts I could give from slingshot, the book that would help people mindset, master their life.   Michael Hingson ** 1:00:53 The other well, going back to the third thing, the other part about that is, and then maybe it's the physicist in me, or the way I look at things, if I don't succeed at it, then I need to also ask myself why, and I need to teach myself by learning what maybe I'm not doing right or or what I'm doing but I could do better and figuring out how to improve. So I'm a firm believer in the fact that people can learn how to overcome challenges like that. I do agree with you, but it is also important then to take it further and say, Well, why am I not succeeding? What is the deal? Go back and learn some more   Moustafa Hamwi ** 1:01:36 100% and that's but that you can only do that when you have developed that level of mindset mastery where you're not looking at limitation, you see the exit. And that's why, if you remember I said, this book is not a one time use. It's a manual that you keep using, because every time you use it, you slowly develop the habit of not paying too much attention to the negative outcomes and focusing more on the positive outcomes, and then building a bridge of what is needed for me to to get there. So one other exercise we use there, which is, you know, follows the methodology that you're talking about, is, is called Use what you have to get what you want. So it's about putting a list of what resources do I have. And I think you are an amazingly walking example of somebody who has done that, because if you were to focus on what you don't have, you're going to go, hold on. But I but I can't see so how am I on Earth going to be able to do podcast interviews? But you did not focus on what you did not have. You focused on what you had, and you capitalized on it. Your ability to ask deep into deep, deep, deep questions, deep, reflective questions, to be passionate about it, to figure out the technology around it, capitalize on your technology background, to be able to find the tech that supports your journey. That's a beautiful example on how you can master your

Feinherb & Spritzig | Alles zu den BR Volleys auf einem Deckel
#70 | Moneyball - Die wirklich große Saisonvorschau mit Georg Klein

Feinherb & Spritzig | Alles zu den BR Volleys auf einem Deckel

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2024 167:17


Gäbe es Feinherb & Spritzig auch auf Französisch, hätte sich Earvin N'Gapeth diese Folge garantiert als Vertragsboni eingefordert! Vielleicht sind die fetten Jahre bei den Grizzlys vorbei, aber mit dieser WIRKLICH großen Saisonvorschau wird jeder in Volleyball-Deutschland gut satt. Georg Klein hat seine Würfelhände auch mal wieder aus der Tasche gezogen, um mit dem Headset auf dem Kopf die Schlacht um Platz 8 nachzuspielen. Bis hierhin alles ganz schlüssig, aber jetzt kommen die Fragen, die euch nur 2h 45min beantworten können: Wer reißt in Giesen das Rura rum? Warum ist Phalanx für Tassilo ein Fremdwort? Hat Karlsruhe Deutsche satt? Wer bekommt von Peter eine gaaanz liebe 5? Warum liegen hier grillende Zirpen? Wo schmeckt's besser – in der Bernsteinhalle oder im Asia-Restaurant? Wer auf die 1 beim Doppel-Hosch? Und spielen die BR Volleys jetzt eigentlich Moneyball?

Vogule co myślisz?
Taniec na rurze dla początkujących (i jego konsekwencje)

Vogule co myślisz?

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 26:50


To się wydarzyło naprawdę, była grana rurka. Jak się ta lekcja skończyła? Jakie z tej lekcji zostały wyciągnięte lekcje? A na jakie lekcje już nie starczyło lekcji? Lekcji lekcji lekcji, zapraszamy na nowe przygody!

Enjoy Your Piping! With Gary West
Episode 29 - Flooers o the Forest

Enjoy Your Piping! With Gary West

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2023 62:00


Gary brings you more high quality music of the bagpipe kind, with tunes from  Rura, The Finlay MacDonald Band, Iain MacFadyen, Fred Morrison and Canadian band, Iron Brew. There's a gorgeous version of the pibroch, Desperate Battle of the Birds on pipes and piano, courtesy of Roddy MacLeod and Craig Muirhead, a taster of a brand new piece for pipes and orchestra from Lorne MacDougall, and with Armistice Day just around the corner, a moving song version of the lament, Flooers o the Forest, from one half of the Corries, Ronnie Brown. TracksRura with Dusk Moon from Dusk MoonCraig Muirhead and Roddy MacLeod with the Desperate Battle of the BirdsThe Finlay MacDonald Band with Alister's Vintage Bar from Pressed for TimeLorne MacDougall with Bonfires of ArranIain MacFadyen with Mary MacPherson of Kyle and Myles MacDonald's Welcome to Skye from Ceol Mor, Ceol BeagIron Brew with the Swallowtale Jig from Are You My Sister?Ronnie Brown with Flooers o the Forest from Battle Songs and Ballads Fred Morrison and Jamie McMenemy with Jamie's Tune and Up South from Up South Support the show

Enjoy Your Piping! With Gary West
Episode 26 - The Nights are Fair Drawin In

Enjoy Your Piping! With Gary West

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2023 59:12


Gary returns after a week's break with more top-drawer music from the world of bagpipes. There's a taster of two new albums, True North from uillean pipe maestro, Calum Stewart, and the latest excellent offering from the band, Rura, entitled Dusk Moon. From the solo highland piping there are sets from Willie McCallum and from John Walsh, a double duo helping from Fin Moore and Sarah Hoy and from Ross Ainslie and Ali Hutton, and a wee trip back in time to the 1970s to the classic sound of Edinburgh City Police along with a solo set from their Pipe Major, Iain MacLeod. Thanks to my sponsorhttps://rghardiebagpipes.com/Tracks Played Calum Stewart with As as Thoisich from True North. Willie McCallum with A.A. Cameron's Strathspey, Donald Ruadh, Wiseman's Exercise, The White Eyebrow, The Piping Poodle, The Night We Had the Goats, MacPherson's Reel and  Inverinate House from Hailey's Song John Walsh with Loch Broom Bay, Toots and Hickory and the Gold Ring from Time to Spare Pipe Major Iain MacLeod with Leaving Glenurquhart, Inveraray Castle and the Smith of Chilliechassie from Edinburgh City Police Pipe Band RevisitedEdinburgh City Police Pipe Band with The Battle of the Somme, The Black Isle, the Banks of the Lossie and Festival March from Edinburgh City Police Pipe Band Revisited Rura with A Minor Emergency from Dusk Moon Fin Moore and Sarah Hoy with Jimmy Mo Mhìle Stòr, Gillun nan Dròbher (The Drover Lads) and Dinkie Dorrian's from The Piper and the Maker 2 – Celebrating C Ross Ainslie and Ali Hutton with Mink from Symbiosis 2.Links MentionedEdinburgh Gaelic School Fundraising Concert, 8th November, details an tickets herehttps://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/thigibh-air-cheilidh-tickets-737953216937?aff=oddtdtcreator&lang=en-gb&locale=en_GB&status=30&view=listingRoss Ainslie, Ali Hutton and Owen Sinclair in concert at Kilmelford, 20th Octoberhttps://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/ross-ainslie-and-ali-hutton-trio-with-owen-sinclair-tickets-700346895417Support the show

Toronto Comedy Podcast
#015 - Baroon at Rura Rounge | The Bankas Show

Toronto Comedy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2023 48:53


Support the show on patreon - patreon.com/benbankas - Ben and Armin talk about the sold out show at Lula Lounge, Spy Baroons and more.

Some Of This Is Bad
some of this is Jake Rura

Some Of This Is Bad

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2023 93:01


SOME OF THIS IS BAD Podcast is a mix mash of self improvement told through the eyes of two comedians. Hosts @coltondowlingcomedy and @dylanpcarlino are joined by @JakeRura This week for an episode about fast dancing, insecurities, and corsets.

Trent Loos Podcast
Rura Route Radio Jan 11, 2023 JC Cole reminds us that on Jan 10, 1776 Thomas Paine authors "Common Sense" the cause for the rebellion. What would he say today?

Trent Loos Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2023 48:11


JC comes to visit Trent at the 2023 PA Farm Show and it creates a tremendous number of dialogue opportunities for all.

En Clave Rural
En Clave Rura: Los efectos de la sequía

En Clave Rural

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2022 59:53


María Santos habla de la actualidad del campo y comenta los efectos de la dura sequía que está soportando España.

Krytyka Polityczna
#3 Rura na miarę naszych możliwości

Krytyka Polityczna

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2022 34:31


Zbudowanie gazociągu na paliwo z Norwegii wymagało 21 lat i trzech kontraktów – późno, drogo, ale w końcu jest. Ale to sukces w skali właściwej dla rządu PiS. Gazu na zimę nie zabraknie (o ile na Bałtyku znów coś nie wybuchnie), państwowy gigant urośnie, zasilana gazem energetyka tania nie będzie, ekologiczna też niespecjalnie. Zastanawiam się, czy można jakoś inaczej. I czy polskie państwo potrafi działać inaczej niż zrzucając kłopoty na barki tych na dole i liczyć, że Polak i Polka przetrzyma, załatwi i jeszcze zrzutkę zorganizuje. Trzeci odcinek Eko-polu o świeżo otwartym Baltic Pipe i książce „Ogień wychodzi z lasu”. Podcast Michała Sutowskiego. *** „Eko-Pol: podcast z nieograniczoną odpowiedzialnością” O wyzwaniach na wczoraj, czyli Polsce w epoce kryzysu klimatycznego, wojny i zarazy; o tym, jak możliwa jest ekonomia obwarzanka w czasach polityki czołgów i dronów; a także o wielkich ideach w niedużym kraju półperyferii będę opowiadał i rozmawiał z gośćmi podcastu ekopolitycznego. Bo żeby móc zmienić świat, trzeba go najpierw opisać.

COSMO Radio po polsku
Rura do piekła

COSMO Radio po polsku

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2022 28:58


Gaulojzes Golana, satyryczny magazyn Klubu Polskich Nieudaczników w Berlinie i kolejna odsłona z serii "Na końcu bańki", czyli analiza doniesień, które zasługują na satyryczny komentarz. Wśród nich tym razem i między innymi: Putin jednak poza wiekiem poborowym? Nowe pomysły Niemiec na rury z North Stream 2? Instagram w Rosji padł - rosyjskie influencerki w Dubaju składają wnioski o azyl! Serio? Uwaga satyra! Może zawierać treści! Von Adam Gusowski.

Enklawa
ŻARŁOK TV: Czeska rura z lodem w środku i holenderski wafel - ŻARWALKING

Enklawa

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2021


Kolejny Żarwalking z głodną Panią Izą i dziwne połączenia smakowe: jemy rzemieślnicze lody z sieciówki Good Lood o smaku dyniowym, a dokładkie pestki z dyni, do tego jesienne imbirowe smaki z lekką nutką pierniczków. Będzie też wstawka o krakowskim street arcie - czyli jak wygląda graffiti w Krakowie? A na główne danie wchodzi DESER z kuchni czeskiej (i nie tylko czeskiej) czyli zakręcone ciasto - zawijas "TRDELNIK", pieczone ciasto drożdżowe, które polewane jest cukrem i smarowane różnymi sosami: masłem orzechowym, kokosem, rafaello, orzechami, nutellą a także czymś co spróbowaliśmy - wnętrzem Stroopwafel czyli nadzieniem z holenderskich kultowych ciastek, które kładzie się na herbatę, aby rozmiękły. To coś dla fanów jesiennych klimatów i smaków - jest delikatny posmak cynamonu i spadających liści z drzew, dynie widać na każdym stoisku, tylko mało kto potrafi je wykorzystać - dzisiaj udowadniamy, żemożna zjeść pyszne desery streetfoodowo. Zapraszamy na Żarwalking / Żarłoking!

Capture Caledonia - The Tracks That Take Us Back

Jack Smedley joins Ewan Petrie for this weeks episode of "The Tracks That Take Us Back". As a founding member of the award winning folk band RURA, Jack has become one of the most versatile and in-demand fiddle players in the Scottish music industry. With RURA Jack has toured extensively across the globe, released 4 critically acclaimed albums and won numerous awards including "Up and Coming Artist of the Year" and "Live Act of the Year" at the Scots Trad Music Awards. As a session musician, Jack regularly collaborates with some of the folk scenes best known acts and has featured on countless albums. Jack also founded "Fochabers Fiddle Week", an educational event giving aspiring fiddle players the opportunity to learn and develop their skills with tuition from Scotland's leading musicians. Join Jack and Ewan as they set off on a journey filled with music and memories through Jack's choices on "The Tracks That Take Us Back".

SER Gijón
El alcalde de Llanera defiende el papel de la ganaderia y la zona rura

SER Gijón

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2021 11:16


Wstawaj, nie udawaj - Co robicie, że nie śpicie?
Nie śpimy bo rura pękla, bo 12 plus 12 i lody ekipy

Wstawaj, nie udawaj - Co robicie, że nie śpicie?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2021 3:04


Wstawaj, nie udawaj - Co robicie, że nie śpicie?
Nie śpimy bo rura pękla, bo 12 plus 12 i lody ekipy

Wstawaj, nie udawaj - Co robicie, że nie śpicie?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2021 3:04


Wstawaj, nie udawaj - Co robicie, że nie śpicie?
Nie śpimy bo rura pękla, bo 12 plus 12 i lody ekipy

Wstawaj, nie udawaj - Co robicie, że nie śpicie?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2021 3:04


Serendipia Armónica
Episodio 3: Jack Smedley - RURA

Serendipia Armónica

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 53:04


Escuchemos las historias detrás de una de las bandas de folk más solicitadas en Escocia, los orígenes de algunas de sus piezas más entrañables y sus motivaciones.

Serendipia Armónica
Episode 3: Jack Smedley - RURA

Serendipia Armónica

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 53:03


Let's listen to the stories behind one of the most sought-after folk bands in Scotland, the origins of some of their most captivating works, and their motivations.

HABLAMOS con Sonia en Polonia
PANDEMICZNY ERASMUS ALICJI [4] | Pękła nam rura! (Poziom A1)

HABLAMOS con Sonia en Polonia

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2021 19:40


To był dopiero trudny moment! Chwile grozy w mieszkaniu Alicji. Posłuchajcie czwartej części naszej relacji! 16/10/‎2020

The Country
The Muster: Bernadette Hunt on Town and Country hui

The Country

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2020 10:19


Southland Federated Farmers vice president talks to The Muster's Andy Thompson about the Town and Country hui.

Thursday Americana Blues Country and Folk Show with Ian Boyle and John Jenkins on Vintage Radio
The Garden Party Radio Show - Live in Concert Series # 1 - Rura Live at the Old Fruitmarket 2020

Thursday Americana Blues Country and Folk Show with Ian Boyle and John Jenkins on Vintage Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2020 62:54


The Garden Party Radio Show - Live in Concert Series # 1 - Rura Live at the Old Fruitmarket 2020

Z Języczkiem czy Bez?
40. [MEAT#15] Pipeline - rura i ścieki, czy biznesowa korpomowa i workflow?

Z Języczkiem czy Bez?

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2020 5:44


Wolisz przeczytać? Kliknij! Może się wydawać, że chodzi o budowę, ścieki i rurki. A jednak jest inaczej - w kontekście biznesowym. Dlatego proponuję Ci poznać nowy wyraz oraz towarzyszący mu często synonim: workflow. ZAPISZ SIĘ NA NEWSLETTER by być na bieżąco, otrzymywać więcej niszowej wiedzy i fajne promocje oraz wiedzę o warsztatach: https://mateuszstasica.pl/newsletter#main Serdeczności, Stasica www.mateuszstasica.pl Hasztagi: #pipeline #workflow #praca #zadania #planowanie ______ Wykorzystałem: 1. Music Provided By: Mediacharger; Music Created By : Spitting Distance; Song Title: Awake; License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mateusz-stasica/message

Hands Up for Trad TV
Hands Up for Trad Afternoon Show with Rura and Joy Dunlop

Hands Up for Trad TV

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2020 38:34


Join Hands Up For Trad for the Afternoon Show with Rura and Joy Dunlop first broadcast on Facebook Live on 9th September 2020. If you enjoy these podcasts please support our Patreon www.patreon.com/handsupfortrad

Podsumowanie dnia w RMF FM
Kolejna podzielona rocznica, kolejna rura na ratunek Czajce

Podsumowanie dnia w RMF FM

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2020 28:55


Najważniejsze informacje ostatniego poniedziałku wakacji. Na Podsumowanie dnia zaprasza Grzegorz Jasiński

Bęc Radio
Bęc Radio: Rytuały pandemiczne –> Krajewski / Frąckowiak

Bęc Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2020 27:29


Życie codzienne w czasach pandemii to projekt badawczy realizowany przez członkinie i członków Zakładu Teorii i Badań Praktyk Społecznych działającego na Wydziale Socjologii UAM w Poznaniu. Badania te, zainicjowane spontanicznie w pierwszych dniach pandemii, mają postać wieloetapowego projektu badawczego, którego celem jest odpowiedź na trzy zasadnicze pytania: Jakiego rodzaju zmiany do życia codziennego Polaków wprowadziła epidemia wirusa SARS-CoV-2? W jaki sposób Polacy próbują adaptować się do zmian w ich życiu codziennym wywołanych przez epidemię koronawirusa? Co zmieniło się w życiu codziennym Polaków na skutek pandemii SARS-CoV-2? O wynikach pierwszego etapu rozmawiamy z prof. Markiem Krajewskim i dr Maciejem Frąckowiakiem, reprezentującymi zespół badawczy skład którego tworzą także: Rafał Drozdowski, Małgorzata Kubacka, Ariel Modrzyk, Łukasz Rogowski, Przemysław Rura, Agnieszka Stamm. Raport po pierwszym etapie badania: https://issuu.com/wydzialsocjologiiuam/docs/_ycie_codzienne_w_czasach_pandemii_-_wydzia__socjo Rozmawiała: Bogna Świątkowska, www.nn6t.pl Montaż: Ola Łapkiewicz

WYWIADOWCY
#3 Wojciech Mann – Kanał Gruba Rura

WYWIADOWCY

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2020 47:00


Jak trudno odchodzi się z Trójki i czy łatwo zdobyć uwagę odbiorców w internecie? Kto wymyślił Grubą Rurę i dlaczego firma Czapex zrezygnowała z jej sponsoringu? A także jakie plany nasz bohater wiąże z pewnym stołkiem? Na te i inne pytania odpowiada jeden, jedyny, niepowtarzalny - Wojciech Mann.

Rejon Ruchu | Czwórka
Rura i samodzielne treningi.

Rejon Ruchu | Czwórka

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2020 63:04


Pole Dance w trybie single player, czyli o samodzielnych treningach na rurze. Gosia Kalinowska „Rurka zamiast biurka” opowiada czy w domu bez obecności instruktora, warto ćwiczyć Pole Dance i jak to robić? Jakie argumenty przeważają? Za czy przeciw? Wreszcie co mają zrobić osoby, które nie mają szkoły  Pole Dance w swojej okolicy?  

Foot Stompin Free Scottish Music Podcast
Foot Stompin’ Free Scottish Music Podcast No 181 featuring Project Smok, Hamish Napier, RURA, Blair Douglas and many more

Foot Stompin Free Scottish Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2020 51:48


Join Hands Up for Trad to listen to the latest Foot Stompin' Scottish music podcast featuring great music from Project Smok, Josie Duncan, RURA, Hamish Napier, Blair Douglas and many more. The full play list is below. Bayview by Project Smok Track - Arisaig https://projectsmok.com/ Greisean Greine by James Graham Track - Air An Tràigh https://open.spotify.com/album/5a8SJQbpOG04uk8U4dnvtW?si=3ZermFYKTM6mT5lm7rIJNg The Woods by Hamish Napier Track - Forest Folk https://hamishnapier.bandcamp.com/ Herkja Paper Böns http://herkja.bandcamp.com/ Decade by RURA https://www.rura.co.uk Northbay by Sarah MacNeil Track - Northbay featuring Patsy Reid http://www.sarahmacneil.com The Flyer by Blair Douglas Track - The Flyer https://www.gaelicmusic.com/album.php?SKU=SKYECD60 Darling Please by Josie Duncan http://josieduncan.bandcamp.com Erica's by Balter http://balter.bandcamp.com Port Bàn by Maggie MacInnes Track - Iain Ghlinn Cuaich http://www.maggiemacinnes.co.uk Blackhouse by Peatbog Faeries Track - Is This Your Son? https://peatbogfaeries.com Subscribe to our Hands Up for Trad YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/c/handsupfortrad More about Hands Up for Trad: http://www.handsupfortrad.scot http://www.scotpodcast.com https://facebook.com/handsupfortrad http://www.twitter.com/handsupfortrad http://www.instagram.com/handsupfortrad https://soundcloud.com/handsupfortrad

Current Show
Andrew Shilliday's Story

Current Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2019 45:40


The amazing story of piper Andrew Shilliday and how an auto-immune disease robbed him of his fingers.  He's back playing again and we hear how!  There's also music from Runrig, Beinn Lee, Gary Innes, Breabach, Rura and Beolach.

rura runrig breabach gary innes
Thale-Harate Kannada Podcast
Ep. 23: ಗ್ರಾಮಗಳು ಪ್ರಜಾಪ್ರಭುತ್ವದ ಯಶಸ್ಸು. Gram Sabhas & Democracy.

Thale-Harate Kannada Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2019 58:46


ನಗರ, ರಾಜ್ಯ ಮತ್ತು ದೇಶದ ಬಗ್ಗೆ ಸಾಕಷ್ಟು ಚರ್ಚೆಗಳು ಕೇಳಸಿಗುತ್ತವೆ. ಆದರೆ ಹಳ್ಳಿಗಳ ಬಗ್ಗೆ ಬರಗಾಲ ಬಂದಾಗ ಮಾತ್ರ ನಮ್ಮ ಗಮನ ಹರಿಯುತ್ತದೆ. ಭಾರತದಲ್ಲಿನ ಹಳ್ಳಿಗಳ ಆಡಳಿತ ಹೇಗೆ ನಡೆಯುತ್ತಿವೆ? ಪ್ರಜಾಪ್ರಭುತ್ವ ನಮ್ಮ ಹಳ್ಳಿಗಳಲ್ಲಿ ಎಷ್ಟರಮಟ್ಟಕ್ಕೆ ಆಚರಣೆಯಲ್ಲಿದೆ? ನಮ್ಮ ತಲೆಹರಟೆ ಪೋಡ್ಕಾಸ್ಟಿನ 23ನೆ ಎಪಿಸೋಡಿನಲ್ಲಿ, ನಮ್ಮೊಡನೆ ವಿಜಯೇಂದ್ರ ರಾವ್ ಅವರು, ನಮ್ಮ ಹಳ್ಳಿಗಳ ಸಾಧನೆಗಳು, ಆಡಳಿತ, ಮತ್ತು ಯಶಸ್ಸಿನ ಬಗ್ಗೆ ಚರ್ಚೆ ಮಾಡುತ್ತಾರೆ. ವಿಜಯೇಂದ್ರ ರಾವ್ ಅವರು ವರ್ಲ್ಡ್ ಬ್ಯಾಂಕ್ನಲ್ಲಿ, ಡೆವಲಪ್ಮೆಂಟ್ ರಿಸರ್ಚ್ ಗ್ರೂಪ್ನಲ್ಲಿ, ಲೀಡ್ ಎಕನಾಮಿಸ್ಟ್ (ಅರ್ಥಶಾಸ್ತ್ರಜ್ಞ) ಆಗಿದ್ದಾರೆ. ಸುಮಾರು 20 ವರ್ಷಗಳಿಂದ ಆಡಳಿತ, ಪ್ರಜಾಪ್ರಭುತ್ವ, ಅಭಿವೃದ್ಧಿ ಬಗ್ಗೆ ಸಂಶೋಧನೆ ಮಾಡುತ್ತ ಬಂದಿದ್ದಾರೆ. ಇವರು ಇತ್ತೀಚಿಗೆ, ಓರಲ್ ಡೆಮಾಕ್ರಸಿ: ಡೆಲಿಬರೇಶನ್ ಇನ್ ಇಂಡಿಯನ್ ವಿಲೇಜ್ ಅಸ್ಸೆಂಬ್ಲೀಸ್ ಎಂಬ ಪುಸ್ತಕವನ್ನು, ಪರೋಮಿತ ಸನ್ಯಾಲ್ ಅವರ ಜೊತೆಗೆ ಬರೆದಿದ್ದಾರೆ. ಈ ಪುಸ್ತಕದಲ್ಲಿ ಇವರು ಸುಮಾರು 300 ಗ್ರಾಮಸಭೆಯ ಚರ್ಚೆಗಳನ್ನು ವಿಶ್ಲೇಷಿಸಿ, ಇಲ್ಲಿ ನಡೆಯುವ ಆಡಳಿತ ಮತ್ತು ಕಾರ್ಯನಿರ್ವಹಣೆಯ ವಿಧಾನಗಳನ್ನು ಅಧ್ಯನ ಮಾಡಿದ್ದಾರೆ. The Thale-Harate Kannada Podcast has had several discussions on urban governance, planning and development. But what about India's villages? How does democracy operate at the most local level, and how does it go beyond voting and elections? In Episode 23, Vijayendra Rao talks to Pavan Srinath and Ganesh Chakravarthi about India's Gram Sabhas, one of India's biggest democratic successes since independence. Vijayendra Rao is a Lead Economist in the Development Research Group of the World Bank, who has been studying local governance, participation, democracy and development in India and elsewhere for the last two decades and more. His latest book is on Oral Democracy: Deliberation in Indian Village Assemblies, which he has co-authored with Paromita Sanyal. The full book is available online. In their book, they have recorded and analysed over 300 Gram Sabha discussions across Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Andhra Pradesh to examine the quality of deliberation and consensus-based decision-making. Dr Rao talks about what they learnt about Gram Sabhas, and about how government policies and literacy can influence the quality of local discussions. ಫಾಲೋ ಮಾಡಿ. Follow the Thalé-Haraté Kannada Podcast @haratepod. Facebook: https://facebook.com/HaratePod/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/HaratePod/ Instagram: https://instagram.com/haratepod/ ಈಮೇಲ್ ಕಳಿಸಿ, send us an email at haratepod@gmail.com. Subscribe & listen to the podcast on iTunes, Google Podcasts, Castbox, AudioBoom, YouTube, Souncloud, Spotify, Saavn or any other podcast app. We are there everywhere. ಬನ್ನಿ ಕೇಳಿ!  You can listen to this show and other awesome shows on the IVM Podcasts app on Android: https://ivm.today/android or iOS: https://ivm.today/ios, or any other podcast app. You can check out our website at http://www.ivmpodcasts.com/

Windy City Irish Radio
Windy City Irish Radio - May 1, 2019

Windy City Irish Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2019 57:30


As the calendar turns to May, the lads celebrate the warmer weather, the bright flowers and the pleasant morning dew that comes with it. Tune in for seasonal music and tunes from all over the world including The Waterboys, Glasgow trad bands Ímar and Rura, the Czech Republic's Poitín - Celtic World Music, Sligo heroes Dervish, Seattle singer-songwriter Colleen Raney, Dublin folkers Lankum, folk music legends Roger Mcguinn with Tommy Makem, Richmond rockers Carbon Leaf, Donal and Liam Clancy, Derek Warfield & The Young Wolfe Tones, and Paddy Casey Music with the Dublin Gospel Choir. Listen to Windy City Irish Radio every Wednesday on WSBC 1240AM from 8PM-9PM and catch this week's podcast here www.windycityirishradio.com

Konglomerat Podcastowy
Przecast 19 – Rura w gardle i Batman bez kolan

Konglomerat Podcastowy

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2018 121:51


Witamy w Przecaście, czyli w przekozackim przeglądzie popkultury z przekazem, tj. w regularnym cyklu luźnych rozmów twórców i przyjaciół Konglomeratu o tym, co aktualnie dzieje się w popkulturze. W tym tygodniu przyglądamy się nowinkom serialowo-filmowym, zachęcamy do lektury dwóch książek oraz do odsłuchania pewnego cyklu audycji. Zastanawiamy się nad tym, jak rozwiną się Marvel Cinematic Universe, MonsterVerse i DC Extended Universe, dyskutujemy o klockach Lego, Duplo i Playmobil, o powiązaniach między „Toksycznym mścicielem” a „Rockym” oraz dzielimy się naszymi doświadczeniami z Showmaxem. Dokładny spis tematów znajdziecie poniżej: * 0:01:39 - Wróżymy z fusów nieskończoności – pierwszy zwiastun "Avengers: Endgame"* 0:20:25 - Liczymy (na) tytany – drugi zwiastun filmu "Godzilla: Król potworów"* 0:31:43 - Gdyby Superman był psychopatą – zwiastun "BrightBurn" Jamesa Gunna* 0:39:04 - Lloyd Kauman grał w "Rockym", a Mando oglądał "Creeda" – kolejne doniesienia o remake'u "Toksycznego mściciela" oraz wrażenia z rewatchu serii "Rocky"* 0:51:28 - Filmowy potencjał Ameryki Południowej – zwiastun "Triple Frontier" z Affleckiem* 0:54:50 - Ludzie bez kolan i konie z dziurami – trailer "Playmobil The Movie" i zapowiedź "Lego The Movie 2"* 1:11:38 - King vs Rowling – powrót "Celebrity Death Match"* 1:20:05 - C H A O S – Plastic Man i Blue Beetle w DC Extended Universe* 1:28:06 - Nikt nie będzie po nim płakał – koniec Showmaxa* 1:45:15 - Sick krytykuje kobiety – casting do serialu "Mandalorianin"* 1:49:08 - Wałbrzych brudny, Wałbrzych nadprzyrodzony – "Ciemno, prawie noc" Joanny Bator* 1:54:14 - Sport i popkultura – "Wielka księga koszykówki" Billa Simmonsa* 1:57:20 - Kiedyś nagrywaliśmy krótkie relacje – Splat!FilmFest 2018* 1:59:48 - Zapowiedź Alchemii Gier – Epic Games Store wkracza na rynek*

Gwiezdne wojny podcast - Wszystkie oblicza Star Wars - Konglomerat podcastowy
Przecast 19 – Rura w gardle i Batman bez kolan

Gwiezdne wojny podcast - Wszystkie oblicza Star Wars - Konglomerat podcastowy

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2018 121:51


Witamy w Przecaście, czyli w przekozackim przeglądzie popkultury z przekazem, tj. w regularnym cyklu luźnych rozmów twórców i przyjaciół Konglomeratu

Historia Polski dla dzieci
42 - Zima stulecia 78/79

Historia Polski dla dzieci

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2018 12:03


Dzisiaj będziemy mówić o zimie stulecia. Dzieci lubią zimę. Dorośli też, ale nie wszyscy. Dzieci lubią zabawę na śniegu, sanki, łyżwy, lepienie bałwana itd. Dorośli jednak mają czasami z śniegiem dużo problemów. Np. samochód nie chce zapalić, bo jest zimno. Rura pęknie od mrozu. Trzeba odśnieżyć dom itd.A jak jest z wami. Czy wy lubicie zimę? A czy wasi rodzice lubią zimę?Dziś będziemy mówić o zimie stulecia, ale co to znaczy. Ludzie podzielili czas na stulecia, które nazywa się też wiekami. Taki wiek, albo stulecie zaczyna się od roku, który ma zero i jeden na końcu numer, a trwa aż do roku z dwoma zerami na końcu. Np. wiek 20 zaczął się w roku 1901, a skończył w 2000. Teraz żyjemy w wieku 21, który zaczął się w roku 2001, a skończy się w roku 2100.Gdy więc mówimy o zimie stulecia mamy na myśli najzimniejszą zimę w 20 wieku. Nie możemy powiedzieć jaka jest najzimniejsza zima w 21 wieku, bo on się jeszcze nie skończył.Tak więc będziemy mówić o zimie stulecia, czyli największej zimie w 20 wieku. A która to była zima? Trudno powiedzieć. Niektórzy mówią, że największa zima, to ta w której jest najzimniej. Inni, że to ta, w której jest najwięcej śniegu. Jeszcze inni mówią tak o najdłuższej zimie.My dzisiaj skupimy się jednej z takich zim. Była to zima na przełomie 1978 i 79.Czterdzieści lat temu ja miałem 9 lat i byłem na wczasach w górach. Gdy w telewizji zaczęto mówić o strasznej zimie mama postanowiła, że wrócimy wcześniej. Niestety pociągi nie jeździły i tak utknęliśmy w Krakowie na dwa dni. Dlaczego pociągi wtedy nie jeździły?Śniegu spadło tak dużo, że pociągi nie mogły go przejechać. Trzeba było najpierw zrobić tunele w śniegu dla pociągów. Wracaliśmy z Krakowa do Bydgoszczy parę dni. A gdy dotarliśmy wreszcie do domu w Bydgoszczy okazało się, że ogrzewanie nie działało.Jak dużo śniegu wtedy spadło?Śniegu napadało aż 84 centymetry. Gdy my porównywaliśmy było to do wysokości stołu albo trzy szkolne linijki. Czy to dużo? Czy 84 centymetry do dużo? Dla małych stworzeń tak.Śniegu było tyle, że nie byłoby widać kota, który by wpadł w zaspę. Ale dlaczego pociągi nie mogły przejechać tyle śniegu? Oprócz śniegu było wtedy jeszcze dużo wiatru. Ten wiatr robił z tego śniegu wielkie góry. Takie góry ze śniegu nazywa się czasem zaspami.Ale dlaczego dorośli czasami nie lubią śniegu i mrozu? Jednym z powodów jest to, że można się poślizgnąć. Nawet samochód może wpaść w poślizg. A czy wiecie co się może stać z rurami, w których jest woda na mrozie? To samo co się dzieje z butelkami pełnymi wody w zamrażalniku.Ta zima stulecia miała wpływ na rząd. Wtedy w Polsce rządził Edward Gierek. Obiecywał opiekę rządu. Ale po zimie stulecia w 1978 ludzie przestali mu wierzyć. Drogi były nieodśnieżone, nie było ogrzewania bo węgiel nie dojechał. Okazało się że Gierek nie był dobrym gospodarzem kraju.Dziś mówiliśmy o zimie stulecia z 1978 roku. Ale w 20 wieku były też inne zimy stulecia.Dla mnie jednak najzimniejsza była ta z 1978 roku. Minęło od niej 40 lat. Zapytajcie swoich rodziców i dziadków która zima była najzimniejsza dla nich.

Historia Polski dla dzieci
42 - Zima stulecia 78/79

Historia Polski dla dzieci

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2018 12:03


Dzisiaj będziemy mówić o zimie stulecia. Dzieci lubią zimę. Dorośli też, ale nie wszyscy. Dzieci lubią zabawę na śniegu, sanki, łyżwy, lepienie bałwana itd. Dorośli jednak mają czasami z śniegiem dużo problemów. Np. samochód nie chce zapalić, bo jest zimno. Rura pęknie od mrozu. Trzeba odśnieżyć dom itd.A jak jest z wami. Czy wy lubicie zimę? A czy wasi rodzice lubią zimę?Dziś będziemy mówić o zimie stulecia, ale co to znaczy. Ludzie podzielili czas na stulecia, które nazywa się też wiekami. Taki wiek, albo stulecie zaczyna się od roku, który ma zero i jeden na końcu numer, a trwa aż do roku z dwoma zerami na końcu. Np. wiek 20 zaczął się w roku 1901, a skończył w 2000. Teraz żyjemy w wieku 21, który zaczął się w roku 2001, a skończy się w roku 2100.Gdy więc mówimy o zimie stulecia mamy na myśli najzimniejszą zimę w 20 wieku. Nie możemy powiedzieć jaka jest najzimniejsza zima w 21 wieku, bo on się jeszcze nie skończył.Tak więc będziemy mówić o zimie stulecia, czyli największej zimie w 20 wieku. A która to była zima? Trudno powiedzieć. Niektórzy mówią, że największa zima, to ta w której jest najzimniej. Inni, że to ta, w której jest najwięcej śniegu. Jeszcze inni mówią tak o najdłuższej zimie.My dzisiaj skupimy się jednej z takich zim. Była to zima na przełomie 1978 i 79.Czterdzieści lat temu ja miałem 9 lat i byłem na wczasach w górach. Gdy w telewizji zaczęto mówić o strasznej zimie mama postanowiła, że wrócimy wcześniej. Niestety pociągi nie jeździły i tak utknęliśmy w Krakowie na dwa dni. Dlaczego pociągi wtedy nie jeździły?Śniegu spadło tak dużo, że pociągi nie mogły go przejechać. Trzeba było najpierw zrobić tunele w śniegu dla pociągów. Wracaliśmy z Krakowa do Bydgoszczy parę dni. A gdy dotarliśmy wreszcie do domu w Bydgoszczy okazało się, że ogrzewanie nie działało.Jak dużo śniegu wtedy spadło?Śniegu napadało aż 84 centymetry. Gdy my porównywaliśmy było to do wysokości stołu albo trzy szkolne linijki. Czy to dużo? Czy 84 centymetry do dużo? Dla małych stworzeń tak.Śniegu było tyle, że nie byłoby widać kota, który by wpadł w zaspę. Ale dlaczego pociągi nie mogły przejechać tyle śniegu? Oprócz śniegu było wtedy jeszcze dużo wiatru. Ten wiatr robił z tego śniegu wielkie góry. Takie góry ze śniegu nazywa się czasem zaspami.Ale dlaczego dorośli czasami nie lubią śniegu i mrozu? Jednym z powodów jest to, że można się poślizgnąć. Nawet samochód może wpaść w poślizg. A czy wiecie co się może stać z rurami, w których jest woda na mrozie? To samo co się dzieje z butelkami pełnymi wody w zamrażalniku.Ta zima stulecia miała wpływ na rząd. Wtedy w Polsce rządził Edward Gierek. Obiecywał opiekę rządu. Ale po zimie stulecia w 1978 ludzie przestali mu wierzyć. Drogi były nieodśnieżone, nie było ogrzewania bo węgiel nie dojechał. Okazało się że Gierek nie był dobrym gospodarzem kraju.Dziś mówiliśmy o zimie stulecia z 1978 roku. Ale w 20 wieku były też inne zimy stulecia.Dla mnie jednak najzimniejsza była ta z 1978 roku. Minęło od niej 40 lat. Zapytajcie swoich rodziców i dziadków która zima była najzimniejsza dla nich.

Foot Stompin Free Scottish Music Podcast
Foot Stompin’ Free Scottish Music Podcast No 168

Foot Stompin Free Scottish Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2018 63:48


Listen to the latest Foot Stompin’ Free Scottish music podcast with another great selection of music from Scotland. This month we feature Hamish Napier, Boys of the Lough, The Poozies, Lori Watson, Alistair McCulloch, Emily Smith and Jamie McClennan, Rura, Skerryvore, Skipinnish, Eabhal, Frigg and Hò-rò. Please share! The Railway by Hamish Napier Track - Double-Header http://www.hamishnapier.com/ The New Line by Boys of the Lough Track - Liffey Side http://boysofthelough.info/ Punch by The Poozies Track - Knees of Fire http://www.poozies.co.uk/ Yarrow Acoustic Sessions by Lori Watson Track - Fine Floors in the Valley http://loriwatson.net/ Off the Hook by Alistair McCulloch Track - Mazurkas http://www.alistairmcculloch.com/ Unplugged by Emily Smith and Jamie McClennan Track - While Roving On A Winter's Night https://emilysmith.org/ In Praise of Home by Rura Track - Day One https://www.rura.co.uk/ Evo by Skerryvore Track - Take My Hand http://www.skerryvore.com Wishing Well by Skipinnish and Malcolm Jones http://www.skipinnish.com 'The MaSìm' by Eabhal https://www.eabhal.com/ Frost on Fiddles by Frigg Track - Ode to Ravintola Pelimanni https://frigg.fi/?lang=en Transatlantic Sessions - Series 4, Vol. One featuring Emily Smith, Mairéad Ni Mhaonaigh & Martha Wainwright Track - Bleeding All Over You Hex by Hò-rò Track - Nuggets https://www.musichoro.com/ Subscribe to our Hands Up for Trad YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/c/handsupfortrad More about Hands Up for Trad: http://www.handsupfortrad.scot https://facebook.com/handsupfortrad http://www.twitter.com/handsupfortrad http://www.instagram.com/handsupfortrad https://soundcloud.com/handsupfortrad

Yonder Podcast
Hometown America

Yonder Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2018 10:48


Ally Barnes quietly inspires and connects her community in ways that make a different. Ally puts the spotlight on the residents of Sarcoxie, a city of about 1,300 residents in southwest Missouri. She wants to show residents what they can accomplish when they get active and work together. By all accounts, she’s making progress – and then some.

Gaming With Scott
StarTrek Rura Ganok

Gaming With Scott

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2018 72:14


StarTrekAdventures Rura Ganok   Thanks for listening!!! You can reach us at the following: Feel free to drop us a line with feedback or questions on email: Feedback@GamingWithScott.com On Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/GamingWScott On Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/GamingWScott Hosts: Josh Jackson is @Actionjack853, https://twitter.com/Actionjack853 Jade Duguay is @One_Nerdy_Mama: https://twitter.com/One_Nerdy_Mama John Kennedy is @@JKMyth: https://twitter.com/JKMyth Me, Scott T @GamingWScott. https://twitter.com/GamingWScott Running the Table: John Garlic is @jpmgarlick: https://twitter.com/jpmgarlick Guest Staring: Jay Payne is @StupidPuppyJay: https://twitter.com/StupidPuppyJay Kelly Caudill is @Erreth: https://twitter.com/erreth Upcoming Events: WhoYerCon March 31-Apr 1 #star #Trek #STA #StarTrekAdventures #free #rpg #podcast

star trek rura scott t gamingwscott jkmyth me
Gaming With Scott
StarTrek Rura Ganok

Gaming With Scott

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2018 72:14


StarTrekAdventures Rura Ganok   Thanks for listening!!! You can reach us at the following: Feel free to drop us a line with feedback or questions on email: Feedback@GamingWithScott.com On Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/GamingWScott On Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/GamingWScott Hosts: Josh Jackson is @Actionjack853, https://twitter.com/Actionjack853 Jade Duguay is @One_Nerdy_Mama: https://twitter.com/One_Nerdy_Mama John Kennedy is @@JKMyth: https://twitter.com/JKMyth Me, Scott T @GamingWScott. https://twitter.com/GamingWScott Running the Table: John Garlic is @jpmgarlick: https://twitter.com/jpmgarlick Guest Staring: Jay Payne is @StupidPuppyJay: https://twitter.com/StupidPuppyJay Kelly Caudill is @Erreth: https://twitter.com/erreth Upcoming Events: WhoYerCon March 31-Apr 1 #star #Trek #STA #StarTrekAdventures #free #rpg #podcast

star trek rura scott t gamingwscott jkmyth me
Connect Podcast
Angelo Mike Vs Leon @ Communication Rura 21.02.2015

Connect Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2015 157:50


Our new b2b set from last night @ Communication Night in Rura Club Czestochowa Poland. Recorded 21.02.2015. 1 Sam Pagannini –Satelite (Drumcode) 2. Kurt Baggaley - Former Self (Something Happening rec) 3. Ruede Hagelstein • Soul Dynamic (Fur Coat Remix) (Watergate rec) 4. Dan Berkson & James What - Reflections feat. Robert Owens (Poker Flat Rec.) 5. Secondcity – Terrace Tech (Saved rec) 6.Ten Walls - Walking With Elephants (Boso Linija Rec.) 7. Kurt Baggaley - Former Self (Drifter Remix) (Something Happening rec) 8. Alex Niggeman - Materium (Poker Flat Rec.) 9. Lehar – XY (Connaisseur Rec) 10. Manuel De La Mare - Very Bitch (Oliver Giacomotto Rmx) (303 Lovers Rec.) 11. Marc Marzenit - Unexpiritualized (Bedrock Rec.) 12. Marc Marzenit - Expiritualized (Bedrock Rec.) 14.Chaim – Blue Shadow (Rumors Rec) 15. Carlo Lio & Harvey McKay - Droid Decay (Bedrock Rec.) 16. Mind Against & Locked Grove – Pulsar (Hotflush Rec) 17. Marc Romboy - Hypernova (Bedrock rec.) 18. Alcatraz - Give Me Luv (Nicole Moudaber Rmx) (Yoshitoshi Rec.) 19. Sharam Jey - Shake Your (Nicole Moudaber Rmx) (Toolroom Rec.) 20. Hunter/Game – Bermuda (Kompakt rec) 21. Guy J - Decemption (promo) 22. Guy J - High (Sudbeat Rec.) 23. Mike Griego - Asteroids (Cid Inc Remix) (Soundteller Rec.) 24. Lee Van Dovski - 050504 (Mobilee Rec.) 25. Sinead O'Connor - Troy (John Creamer & Stephane K Rmx) (Devolution Rec.) 26. shmuel flash - chilling moments (bedrock dub) (Bedrock Rec) 27. Aquilia - VooDoo (Medway Rmx) (Inversus Rec.) 28. James Gill – Nevermind (Sudbeat) 29. Dot Allison - We're Only Science (Mantra Rec.) 30. Guy Mantzur & Sahar Z - Our Foggy Trips (Lost & Found Rec.) 31. Guy Mantzur & Sahar Z - The Greenwich Tunnel (Lost & Found Rec.) 32. Goncalo – Mental Help (dub) (Clarisse rec)

Angelo Mike Podcast
Angelo Mike Vs Leon @ Communication Rura 21.02.2015

Angelo Mike Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2015 157:50


Our new b2b set from last night @ Communication Night in Rura Club Czestochowa Poland. Recorded 21.02.2015. 1 Sam Pagannini –Satelite (Drumcode) 2. Kurt Baggaley - Former Self (Something Happening rec) 3. Ruede Hagelstein • Soul Dynamic (Fur Coat Remix) (Watergate rec) 4. Dan Berkson & James What - Reflections feat. Robert Owens (Poker Flat Rec.) 5. Secondcity – Terrace Tech (Saved rec) 6.Ten Walls - Walking With Elephants (Boso Linija Rec.) 7. Kurt Baggaley - Former Self (Drifter Remix) (Something Happening rec) 8. Alex Niggeman - Materium (Poker Flat Rec.) 9. Lehar – XY (Connaisseur Rec) 10. Manuel De La Mare - Very Bitch (Oliver Giacomotto Rmx) (303 Lovers Rec.) 11. Marc Marzenit - Unexpiritualized (Bedrock Rec.) 12. Marc Marzenit - Expiritualized (Bedrock Rec.) 14.Chaim – Blue Shadow (Rumors Rec) 15. Carlo Lio & Harvey McKay - Droid Decay (Bedrock Rec.) 16. Mind Against & Locked Grove – Pulsar (Hotflush Rec) 17. Marc Romboy - Hypernova (Bedrock rec.) 18. Alcatraz - Give Me Luv (Nicole Moudaber Rmx) (Yoshitoshi Rec.) 19. Sharam Jey - Shake Your (Nicole Moudaber Rmx) (Toolroom Rec.) 20. Hunter/Game – Bermuda (Kompakt rec) 21. Guy J - Decemption (promo) 22. Guy J - High (Sudbeat Rec.) 23. Mike Griego - Asteroids (Cid Inc Remix) (Soundteller Rec.) 24. Lee Van Dovski - 050504 (Mobilee Rec.) 25. Sinead O'Connor - Troy (John Creamer & Stephane K Rmx) (Devolution Rec.) 26. shmuel flash - chilling moments (bedrock dub) (Bedrock Rec) 27. Aquilia - VooDoo (Medway Rmx) (Inversus Rec.) 28. James Gill – Nevermind (Sudbeat) 29. Dot Allison - We’re Only Science (Mantra Rec.) 30. Guy Mantzur & Sahar Z - Our Foggy Trips (Lost & Found Rec.) 31. Guy Mantzur & Sahar Z - The Greenwich Tunnel (Lost & Found Rec.) 32. Goncalo – Mental Help (dub) (Clarisse rec)

Gaming on Rura Penthe
Gaming on Rura Penthe Episode 7

Gaming on Rura Penthe

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2014


Mike, Tooze, Sean, and Thomas discuss Resistance is Futile OP2, rules forums, and reversing the phase polarity on the self sealing stem-boltsContact Us:E-mail: stawpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: @stawpodcastFacebook: Gaming on Rura PentheTheme Song:Star Trek Theme by RACRandomness:WizKids Rules ForumPicard Vs Star Destroyer

Gaming on Rura Penthe
Gaming on Rura Penthe Episode 6

Gaming on Rura Penthe

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2014


Mike, Tooze, Sean, and Thomas discuss Resistance is Futile OP1, preview OP2, and complain about WizKids.Contact Us:E-mail: stawpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: @stawpodcastFacebook: Gaming on Rura PentheTheme Song:Star Trek Theme by RAC

Gaming on Rura Penthe
Gaming on Rura Penthe Episode 5

Gaming on Rura Penthe

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2014


Mike, Tooze, Sean, and Thomas discuss Collective OP3, Resistance is Futile Blind Boosters, and Wave 8 Ships.Contact Us:E-mail: stawpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: @stawpodcastFacebook: Gaming on Rura PentheTheme Song:Star Trek Theme by RAC

Gaming on Rura Penthe
Gaming on Rura Penthe Episode 4

Gaming on Rura Penthe

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2014


Mike, Chris, Sean, and Thomas discuss Gencon, Collective OP2 results, ship builds, and random thoughts about the shows.Greenman DesignsContact Us:E-mail: stawpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: @stawpodcastFacebook: Gaming on Rura PentheTheme Song:Star Trek Theme by RAC

Gaming on Rura Penthe
Gaming on Rura Penthe Episode 3

Gaming on Rura Penthe

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2014


Chris, Sean, and Thomas discuss their experiences with Collective OP 1, Fleet Captains and the Raven, and general thoughts on Collective OP2.Spoilers:Fleet Captains: ThatTeriGirlRaven: USS Raven Spoiled by panicatthesiskoContact Us:E-mail: stawpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: @stawpodcastFacebook: Gaming on Rura PentheTheme Song:Star Trek Theme by RACErrata: I totally meant Reginald Barclay, not Lon Suder. 

Gaming on Rura Penthe
Gaming on Rura Penthe Episode 1

Gaming on Rura Penthe

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2014


Join Mike, Sean, Thomas, and Tooze as we talk about recent games, the Arena OP, Era/Faction Pure, and Blind Boosters. Runtime is 1 Hour, 28 Minutes, and 51 Seconds.Contact Us:E-mail: stawpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: @stawpodcastTheme Song:Star Trek Theme by RAC

Gaming on Rura Penthe
Gaming on Rura Penthe Episode 2

Gaming on Rura Penthe

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2014


Mike, Sean, Thomas, Tooze, and Chris go back in time to discuss the Dominion War OP 1 event, the wave 6 ships, and more thoughts on the upcoming Collective OP1. Runtime is 1 Hour, 31 Minutes, and 47 Seconds. Apologies for the background noise, but volume levels should be improved versus the 1st episode.List Builders:Space Dock iTunesSpace Dock Google PlayDracoSoft STAW BuilderContact Us:E-mail: stawpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: @stawpodcastTheme Song:Star Trek Theme by RAC

Simply Scottish
Scotland's Global Empire: An Interview with Author Jock Gallagher

Simply Scottish

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2014 30:35


Roman Empire. British Empire. Scottish Empire? We've all heard of Carnegie, Muir, Lipton, and Connery. Discover all the lesser-known Scots and their lasting contributions to the world in the new book Scotland’s Global Empire. Author Jock Gallagher shares highlights of his book with us and explains his challenge in bringing so many stories together to weave a compelling case for a global Scottish empire. Enjoy music from Rura, Kilmarnock Edition, Eddi Reader, and more!

Whartson Hall
RPGMP3 and Whartson Hall Aethernauts 1: Heroes of Rura-Tonga 01 PBY SOS

Whartson Hall

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2013 210:51


Mayday! Mayday! We're going down hard!

Foot Stompin Free Scottish Music Podcast
AyePodcast 121 - Scottish Music Podcast

Foot Stompin Free Scottish Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2013 30:04


Hi there, Here's another programme of fantabulous Scottish music. We start off with a Intro from Rura. This is the demo before the album - I've always loved it! Next up is the brand new release - At the Heart of it All from Capercaillie then a lovely song - Eggshells from Rachel Sermanni. Then it's a brand new release from James Duncan MacKenzie and then the iTunes chart topping hit The Shinty Referee by Fergie MacDonald. We finish off this podcast with BBC Radio Scotland Young Traditional Musician Award Winner Daniel Thorpe's The Curiosity Shop.

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts
Pierina Bencetti at RURA

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2009


This is a recording from the concert of a French singer Pierina Bencetti at RURA (ul. Łazienna 4) on 28.10.2009. The concert was dedicated to her good friend, Léo Ferré (1916 - 1993), a great composer of contemporary French popular songs. This concert was made possible by Alliance Française, Kogeneracja S.A. and [...]

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts
Jonquil - Live at Rura

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2008


12.09.2008, Jazz Club RURA (ul. Łazienna 4) - An Oxford-based band Jonquil performed their first concert in Poland. The sound in live was much livelier than the recorded version (you can find the samples on their myspace page: www.myspace.com/jonquiluk), and in our interview, Hugo Manuel and Sam Scott from the band explain [...]

SXSW For Newbies
Shimon Rura

SXSW For Newbies

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2008 2:00


After meeting on the plane ride from Boston to Austin, C.C. asked Shimon from http://www.meetbabbledog.com to talk about why he was at SXSW.

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts
From the Archive: Manufactur @ Rura

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2007


  The Summer is almost over, but our archive still has some unpublished recordings. Before the cultural life in Wrocław goes back to full operation, we will try to publish these lost materials as much as we can. The first in the series is the recording of a concert by Manufactur back in April [...]

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts
From Francophonie 2007 - Lady Bird Jazz’tet

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2007


  The fourth episode of our Journées de la Francophonie 2007 video coverage presents the scenes from the concert of the French jazz quartet Lady Bird Jazz’tet at the local jazz club RURA (24.03.2007). Video download (iPod video compatible): ladybird.mp4 (H.264 / AAC / 26.20MB / 4:38) Please use Quicktime 7 or VLC Media Player for [...]

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts
From Francophonie 2007 - Yeti

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2007


  The second episode of our video podcast from Journées de la Francophonie 2007 features Yeti (23.03.2007 @ Jazz club RURA). Their songs are all in French, and their concert itself is presented like a show in French. When everything is in French, it is not really clear how the non-French-speaking public would [...]

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts
From Francophonie 2007 - Joanna Gałka Quintet

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2007


  The first episode of our Journées de la Francophonie 2007 podcast series presents the scenes from the jazz concert by Joanna Gałka Quintet (22.03.2007 @ Jazz club RURA). At this concert, the quintet played the classics of French popular songs with the standard jazz arrangement. Video download (iPod video compatible): galka_quintet.mp4 (H.264 / AAC [...]

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts
Steamboat Switzerland

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2006


  On Wednesday, 15.11.2006, Steamboat Switzerland played at RURA Jazz Club as part of the Rura Jazz Festival (07.11-03.12.2006). The music of Steamboat Switzerland is avant-garde and full of improvization and playfulness. In our interview, Marino Pliakas speaks about the band and its music, and also the impression of the concert at Rura. Video [...]

Wroclaw Weekly Podcasts

  The magazine “Rita Baum” organized its promotional presentation at RURA on 29.05.2006. The programme included the readnig of the fragments on “Madness,” a slide-show and the film-screening, all accompanied by a live performance of the dark ambient music. In our video, we present a general view of the evening without comments. [...]