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What does it mean for us to be invited into sacred spaces? What do we believe? And what kind of life do we live as a result?How can we ask thoughtful questions that give people the space to think more deeply and connect them back to themselves?How can we lean into the discomfort of deconstructing and reconstructing what we think that we know and believe? How can we acknowledge our ever changing contexts and become more conscious of the way we live?...Sara shares her story of becoming a minister. Abbie and Sara discuss the difference between chasing a dream that is outside yourself and letting one emerge that already lives inside you. Abbie shares the story of how she came into the world of Interpersonal Communication. Abbie and Sara consider the saying, "If you don't have anything nice to say, don't say anything at all," whether or not "niceness" is still the measure we want to use, and reconceptualizing the "value" we add to conversations and knowing when to listen and when to stand up for yourself. Sara shares the stories she wants to hear more of and why we need to be intentional about seeking out stories of delight....Check out Sara's podcast here!...Stories Lived. Stories Told. is created, produced & hosted by Abbie VanMeter.Stories Lived. Stories Told. is an initiative of the CMM Institute for Personal and Social Evolution.Music for Stories Lived. Stories Told. is created by Liv Hukkleberg. ...Explore all things Stories Lived. Stories Told.Email me! storieslived.storiestold@gmail.comFollow me on Instagram.Subscribe on YouTube.Check out my website.Learn more about the CMM Institute.Learn more about CMM.Learn more about Cosmopolis 2045.Learn more about CosmoKidz.Learn more about the CosmoTeenz Fellows' work on Instagram.
How do we define ourselves in our communities? How does this build empathy? How do we work together to create a pool of shared meaning?How do the little moments shape us just as much as the big moments? How can we better engage with bifurcation points and be intentional about how we show up in the little moments?...Today, Reverend Sara Hayden shares the story she tells about herself and the story that others tell about her. Abbie and Sara discuss the overcorrection that happened between telling women that they can't do things to telling women they can "have it all" and why we need to find peace in believing that we are enough. Sara teaches Abbie about the role of emergent strategy in helping us to meet each other where we are at. Finally, Abbie and Sara explore re-examining the language we use, recognizing the power in naming things, and being brave and vulnerable in creating the space for change. ...Check out Sara's podcast here!...Stories Lived. Stories Told. is created, produced & hosted by Abbie VanMeter.Stories Lived. Stories Told. is an initiative of the CMM Institute for Personal and Social Evolution.Music for Stories Lived. Stories Told. is created by Liv Hukkleberg. ...Explore all things Stories Lived. Stories Told.Email me! storieslived.storiestold@gmail.comFollow me on Instagram.Subscribe on YouTube.Check out my website.Learn more about the CMM Institute.Learn more about CMM.Learn more about Cosmopolis 2045.Learn more about CosmoKidz.Learn more about the CosmoTeenz Fellows' work on Instagram.
We celebrate the first anniversary of our podcast with highlights from conversations with Tod Bolsinger, LaKesha Womack, Sara Hayden, Erica St. Bernard, and J. Kameron Carter. Listen to the original episodes: Tod Bolsinger LaKesha Womack Sara Hayden Erica St. Bernard J. Kameron Carter
Theologian and pastor Claudio Carvalhaes is the brilliant liturgical artist and professor at Union Theological Seminary in New York City. He is so full of life, creativity, and love for the world. Being around him is profoundly transformative. In part two, he and host Sara Hayden talk about prayer as a movement, a rhythm, a force that forms and shapes us and, through us, our communities; what it means to develop a holistic view of the world and all the creatures, great and small, within it; and about praying with worms.
Theologian and pastor Claudio Carvalhaes is the brilliant liturgical artist and professor at Union Theological Seminary in New York City. He is so full of life, creativity, and love for the world. Being around him is profoundly transformative. In part one, he and host Sara Hayden an examine the way the desert maximizes our own current life predicaments, and how all the spaces in the world that might feel like traps could be doorways into our true selves.
The Rev. Dr. Bill Brown is the William Marcellus McPheeters Professor of Old Testament at Columbia Theological Seminary. His books include numerous commentaries on the Psalms and other Old Testament literature. He has an abiding interest in the use of scripture in the life of the church and the world, particularly in the context of ecology and justice. Listen to part one of the conversation, where host Sara Hayden admits all the things she'd rather pay attention to than God; Bill and Sara talk about how long it takes for God's people to live into God's freedom; and Bill reminds us that the real power of the wisdom corpus lies and its capacity to evoke a sense of wonder.
Executive Director speaks with the Rev. Sara Hayden (1001 New Worshiping Communities; host of the New Way podcast) about emerging faith communities, the creator economy, and laminating croissants.
Who doesn’t love a cocktail? And who doesn’t love pie? When the two join together, the result is amazing, and Sara’s Tipsy Pies is an example of that amazingness. Sara Hayden herself is also amazing. Mom of five, including a child with special needs and triplets, she wanted to start a little business. The results have been stunning, and she’s now a fan favorite at the Minnesota State Fair. In this episode, Sara discusses her adventures and provides blunt inspiration that applies to almost everyone.
Sara started her business 8 years ago when her children started school. Now Sara's Tipsy Pies is in over 50 stores in Minnesota and Wisconsin! In the first episode of the Way Beyond Ordinary Women Podcast, Sheri interviews Sara Hayden of Sara's Tipsy Pies on her business' growth and future. Thanks for listening! Find Sara at SarasTipsyPies.com and check out the show notes for all the links mentioned in this episode!
Hello everyone! In this episode of It’s all about Her, you meet Sara Hayden, the proud owner of Sara’s Tipsy Pies. Her Pies are Made with Love and Alcohol. These handmade pies are made with a bit of naughty baked inside! She tells us all about starting her a business and how exciting it was to be selling pies at The Minnesota State Fair. I had a great time talking with Sara and I hope you enjoy the conversation!
Journalist Sara Hayden talks about the challenges of recreating a disjointed family history from Colorado to China and back. She reads from her essay, Living Room, and details the influence that growing up mixed race in Wyoming has had on her writing.
This week we sit down with journalist Charles Russo, author of “Striking Distance: Bruce Lee & the Dawn of Martial Arts in America.” His book covers Bruce Lee’s early years as a young martial artist in San Francisco and his polarizing effect as a brash upstart in the Bay Area martial arts scene of the 1960’s. Charles Russo’s interest in Bruce Lee started with his fascination of the history of the Bay Area (San Francisco, CA.) Russo was sitting in his photojournalist class and another student was sharing images of Chinatown, including a picture of the Chinese Hospital stating that that was the hospital where Bruce Lee was born. Russo says, “It blew my mind…how come no one had every told me that Bruce Lee was born in San Francisco?” It instantly made San Francisco that much cooler and interesting, but he was indignant that no one was celebrating that fact. So he decided to look into that story. Once Charles started looking into the story of Bruce Lee and San Francisco, he found a treasure trove of forgotten history. Bruce’s Bay Area years in the 60’s mark the origins of martial arts culture in America. And the small group of young martial artists he collaborated with would collectively create the modern martial arts movement. Striking Distance chronicles the old guard of the San Francisco martial arts masters as well as Bruce’s influential friendship with James Lee and the young bucks of Oakland trying to modernize the old styles. Russo also tells the dramatic story of the friction Bruce had with the established Chinatown martial arts community resulting in that famous showdown fight in Oakland that inspired Bruce Lee to create his own martial way called Jeet Kune Do. We also discuss who actually won that famous fight between Bruce Lee and Wong Jack Man--Bruce’s scientific street fighting versus traditional flamboyant style. Charles also tells us why Bruce Lee is one of the philosophical godfathers of MMA. #AAHA (Awesome Asians and Hapas) Charles Russo had two #AAHA shout-outs for us. His first shout-out goes to his friend and colleague Sara Hayden, a young hapa journalist who helped Russo with editing his book. Sara is currently working on a project called The Silk Knots Project, which documents and preserves the stories of Asian Americans and Hapas in the American West. Russo’s second #AAHA shout-out goes to his childhood friend Korean American Brian Leo, a visual artist in NYC. Leo’s work is “garage-pop surrealism” and you can view his work at brianleo.com. Sara and Brian—you’re awesome, keep up the amazing work! #BruceLeeMoment Russo shares that since working on his book, he has had many #BruceLeeMoments. Specifically, when he was watching the Netflix show “The Get Down” and seeing the character Shaolin Fantastic who wears a Bruce Lee belt buckle, how Bruce Lee is viewed as the badass cool in the early hip-hop community. Russo thinks of the Bruce Lee quote, “Absorb what is useful, discard what is useless, make something uniquely your own,” as he’s watching the early DJs discuss isolating the break beat parts of records and making something uniquely their own. Russo realizes this embodies exactly what Bruce Lee was talking about. He now recognizes so many of Bruce’s ideas influencing culture and that we are just now understanding the ideas he was talking about over 50 years ago. You can purchase Charles Russo’s book here: “Striking Distance: Bruce Lee and the Dawn of Martial Arts in America” Share your #AAHA and #BruceLeeMoment recommendations with us via social media @BruceLee or email us at hello@brucelee.com