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Nick Davi and his wife move to Las Vegas and join Grace Point Church. As the family grows with the birth of two children, so does Nick Davi's calling. Nick Davi joins the staff at the church, eventually becoming the Pastor of Operations, overseeing the church's 30,000 square foot facility. The family settles in a gated townhome community in North Las Vegas... Court of Aliante. Over the last year, difficulties with a neighbor make it necessary for Davi to make multiple complaints to the Homeowners Association. And that's not all. The situation is so bad. Davi calls police twice in one month and obtains a restraining order against the neighbor. The family even moves out of their condo for a few weeks to de-escalate tensions. They stay with friends but return home as necessary to collect additional clothes and personal effects. When Nick Davi files for a restraining order against his neighbor, he tells police he and his family feel “terrorized ” after weeks of allegedly harassment. The family says the neighbor thrown rocks and large amounts of dog feces into their yard, accused the neighbor of flooding their home, and during one confrontation threatened the Davi children who were playing their backyard. The neighbor reportedly pulled a finger across her throat in a cutting motion and saying the family was next. The Davi family stops at their home to get fresh clothing and other personal items. The family is pulling out of a parking spot as Joe Junio drives by them, and according to 8 News, parks her car right next to the Davi's car and rolls down her windows. Pastor Nick gets out of his car to talk to Junio, as the children used cell phone to record the altercation. As Nick Davi asks Junio "what is your problem with us?" Junio opens her car door, takes a shooters stance, and fires a gun at Pastor Nick Davi. Davi is shot in the stomach. Junio turns the weapon on Sarah David. According to Grace Point Pastor Ty Neal, "Sarah goes on the offensive and wrestles the gun away." Sarah Davi is shot in the thigh. Joe Junio runs into her townhouse as 911 is called. Pastor Nick Davi dies from his injuries. Joining Nancy Grace Today: Craig W. Drummond - Las Vegas Attorney, Call the Captain, Fmr. Prosecutor, www.drummondfirm.com, FB: Drummond Law Firm-Call The Captain, IG: @callthecaptain_drummondlawfirm Caryn L. Stark - Psychologist, renowned TV and Radio trauma expert and consultant, www.carynstark.com, Instagram: carynpsych, FB: Caryn Stark Private Practice Chris McDonough - Director At the Cold Case Foundation, Former Homicide Detective, Host of YouTube channel- ‘The Interview Room', ColdCaseFoundation.org Dr. Jan Gorniak - Board Certified Forensic Pathologist, Fmr. Medical examiner for Clark County Alexis Tereszcuk - CrimeOnline.com Investigative Reporter, Writer/Fact Checker, Lead Stories dot Com, Twitter: @swimmie2009 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to our podcast.. in this episode...new adventures on national radio for Sarah (David is slightly jealous!!), soups, homemade stock, healthy breads, focaccia, yorkshire puddings, batch cooking and we tackle all your food questions with plenty of laughs along the way... we have everyting from sleep masks to sore knees!!! Thank you for listening and don't forget to share, like and subscribe. Email sarahbutlerathome@gmail.com - follow Sarah on instagram and X and listen to Lunchtime live's big batch with Sarah every Monday at 12.20 on Newstalk radio. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Evènementiel et culture dans le 65 du 25 décembre 2023 au 1er janvier 2024Conférence : "Les guides chasseurs pêcheurs des Pyrénées" le mercredi 27 décembre à 10h45 à la Médiathèque de Lourdes, animée par Céline BONNAL40° anniversaire de la Maison du Parc National et de la Vallée : spectacle "Transmissions" le mercredi 27 décembre à 18h à la Maison du Parc National et de la Vallée à Luz St Sauveur (conte théâtral et musical avec Laurie MONTAMAT et Nathalie CARMOUZE)Les Pyrénées secrètes - projections-débat à la Maison du Val d'Azun - Arrens-Marsous :- le mardi 26 décembre à 17 h "Le roi des forêts ancestrales, l'ours"- le mercredi 27 décembre à 20h30 "Le corsaire des cimes , le gypaète barbu"- le jeudi 28 décembre à 17h " La discrète du piémont, la genette "Concerts de Noël :- "Chœur d'hommes montagnards" avec les chanteurs Eths d'Azu le jeudi 28 décembre à 20h30 en l'église St Saturnin à Argelès-Gazost- "Fêtons Noël "avec les Chanteurs Pyrénéens de Tarbes et Sarah DAVID le vendredi i 29 décembre à 20h30 en l'église St Saturnin à Argelès-Gazost- "HA-PY Gospel" le 27 décembre à 19h ,en l'église St Jean-Baptiste de Batsère- Concert de Noël avec les Pastourelles de Campan le 29 décembre à 19h en l'église St Jean-Baptiste de Campan- Concert de Noël à l'orgue le 29 décembre à 21h en l'église de Cauterets- Concert de Noël d'orgues le 27 décembre à 17h30 en l'église des Templiers à Luz St Sauveur- Concert "Christmas Mademoiselle" le 29 décembre à 18h sur le parvis de l'église de Luz St Sauveur- Concert de Noël des Boleros le 29 décembre à 20h30 en l'église de Tournay- Concert de Noël le 29 décembre à 18 h avec le Grand Orphéon en l'église de Vielle-Aure Ciné CGR : Avant-Première du film "Maison de retraite 2" en présence de Kev Adams le vendredi 29 décembre à 15h"Tarbes en Décembre" : village de Noël et animations (carrousel, patinoire etc...) du 16 décembre au 6 janvier 2024 voir site Mairie de TarbesDétails des autres animations dans le podcast : "Magie de Noël "au château de GardèresExpositions nouvelles et en cours, spectacles, concerts, théâtre, cinéma .
Pennies are stupid :: How to divide currencies :: Assange and the lying media lies about lying :: Assange isn't even a U.S. citizen; why is he being accused of breaking U.S. law? :: A surprisingly not-crazy call from Sarah :: David agrees with a previous caller :: Civil asset forfeiture :: Homeless vets :: GMOs & non-GMOs :: The long, dark lashes on that camel :: Show: 2021-12-12 Aria, Rich E., Peakless Mountaineer
Pennies are stupid :: How to divide currencies :: Assange and the lying media lies about lying :: Assange isn't even a U.S. citizen; why is he being accused of breaking U.S. law? :: A surprisingly not-crazy call from Sarah :: David agrees with a previous caller :: Civil asset forfeiture :: Homeless vets :: GMOs & non-GMOs :: The long, dark lashes on that camel :: Show: 2021-12-12 Aria, Rich E., Peakless Mountaineer
Pennies are stupid :: How to divide currencies :: Assange and the lying media lies about lying :: Assange isn't even a U.S. citizen; why is he being accused of breaking U.S. law? :: A surprisingly not-crazy call from Sarah :: David agrees with a previous caller :: Civil asset forfeiture :: Homeless vets :: GMOs & non-GMOs :: The long, dark lashes on that camel :: Show: 2021-12-12 Aria, Rich E., Peakless Mountaineer
On this Josie Show Special Edition Josie chats with David Frizzell and Mary Sarah. Josie also chats with David Chokachi. Don't miss this episode of The Josie Show!
Drugs, art, humans, gold – organized criminal networks smuggle illegal products into legal supply chains to then sell them on the European market. Roman Kern and Anne Kathrin Thüringer speak with experts of an international SWP project that takes a closer look at some of these illicit supply chains. Timestamp: 2:55 Mark Shaw, Director of the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime and renowned expert on international organized crime, talks about the origin and evolution of illicit trade and financial flows and the ways in which both are shaped today. Timestamp: 6:26 Daniel Brombacher, head of the project »Global Partnership on Drug Policies and Development« at the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) analyzes the visible and invisible stages of the global drug trade. Timestamp: 11:51 Jan Schubert is currently seconded to the Federal Foreign Office as Desk Officer in the field of international cooperation against Drug Trafficking, Organized Crime, Human Trafficking, Piracy and Corruption and as liaison officer to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). He describes how the civil wars and instability in Iraq and Syria have created attractive spaces for organized criminal networks to engage in the illicit trade of art works. Timestamp: 17:59 Dr Judith Vorrath is a Senior Associate at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) with a focus on transnational organized crime linked to armed violence and fragility. As she investigates illegal human trafficking, particularly of women from southern Nigeria, she sheds light on the connection to local traditions and spiritual rituals, as well as the colonial slave trade and even current migration movements. Timestamp: 25:14 Dr Melanie Müller is a Senior Associate with a focus on Southern Africa at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) and the head of the research project “Approaches for Transnational Governance of Sustainable Commodity Supply Chains”. Her research examines illegal gold mining in South Africa and the resulting transnational illicit trade and financial flows. Publications Mark Shaw Mark Shaw, Give us more guns. How South Africa's Gangs were Armed, Johannesburg/Cape Town/London: Jonathan Ball Publishers, 2021, https://www.jonathanball.co.za/component/virtuemart/give-us-more-guns-how-south-africa-s-gangs-were-armed Tuesday Reitano and Mark Shaw, Criminal Contagion: How Mafias Gangsters and Scammers Profit from a Pandemic, C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd., 2021, https://www.hurstpublishers.com/book/criminal-contagion/ Daniel Brombacher: Daniel Brombacher and Sarah David, From Alternative Development to Development-Oriented Drug Policies, Graduate Institute Geneva, 12, 2020, https://journals.openedition.org/poldev/3711 Daniel Brombacher, Jan Westerbarkei, From Alternative Development to Sustainable Development: The Role of Development Within the Global Drug Control Regime, Policy Commentary, Journal of Illicit Economies and Development 1(1), 2018: 89–98, https://jied.lse.ac.uk/articles/10.31389/jied.12/ Melanie Müller: Melanie Müller, Armin Paasch, When only the coal counts: German co-responsibility for human rights in the South African coal sector, Johannesburg: ActionAid South Africa, 2016 Judith Vorrath: Judith Vorrath, Verena Zoppei, Africa–EU relations on organized crime: between securitization and fragmentation, In: Ariadna Ripoll Servent/Florian Trauner (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Justice and Home Affairs Research, Abingdon & New York: Routledge, 2018, pp. 323-335 Judith Vorrath, Organized Crime and Development, Challenges and Policy Options in West Africa's Fragile States, SWP Research Paper, 2015, https://www.swp-berlin.org/en/publication/organized-crime-and-development This podcast was created as part of a workshop funded by the German Foreign Office.
Sarah teaches middle school English Language Arts. Topics include building relationships and SEL.
Sarah teaches middle school English Language Arts. Topics include building relationships and SEL.
This was an excellent finish to a fun series. Bryan showed up for only a moment. But his contribution was much appreciated. Enjoy.
This one gets a little heated.
NSDJ-79 Dr. Sarah David Interview by Dr. Jay Sordean NSDJ-79 Dr. Sarah David Interview by Dr. Jay Sordean is a very informative and fun conversation about how to improve your LinkedIn® page to make it more attractive and bring in Continue reading → The post NSDJ-79 Dr. Sarah David Interview by Dr. Jay Sordean appeared first on Natural Solutions with Dr. Jay.
"If you are not where you want to be, do not quit, instead reinvent yourself and change your habits." -- Eric ThomasOur guest today was named by Forbes as a Top Career Resource and is author of “Jump Start Your Career Now!” She's an award winning author and founder of the National Institute for Career Empowerment (NICE).Dr. Sarah David is an educator, entrepreneur, and executive branding business strategist She's also the host of the Empowered Womenpreneurs podcast where she shares... power moves & , business tips to monetize your brand, and insights from special guests to empower your business, career, health, wealth, life, and build your Legacy Empire! https://bookme.name/drsarahdavid
Dr. Sarah David, wykładowca w Centrum Zarządzania Karierą Mays Business School na Texas A&M University powiedziała, że marka osobista to w gruncie rzeczy obietnica unikalnych wartości, które możesz dać od siebie. Jest to też sposób, aby potencjalni klienci widzieli ciebie jako jedyną możliwość na rozwiązanie ich problemu. W dzisiejszej audycji rozmawiamy z Piotrem Motylem, przedsiębiorcą od lat mieszkającym w Tajlandii o tym: Czym jest "Personal branding"? Jakie mogą być korzyści dla Ciebie i Twojego biznesu? Po komu marka osobista? Co jest niezbędne aby zbudować markę ? Jaki wpływ ma marka na zwiększenie sprzedaży ? Kiedy i komu przekaz marki może zaszkodzić ? Jakie były największe wpadki wizerunkowe marek? Nasze spotkanie można podsumować słowami Warrena Buffeta: „Potrzeba 20 lat, żeby zbudować dobrą reputację, a tylko 5 minut, żeby ja zniszczyć. Jeśli to sobie uświadomisz, będziesz podchodzić do wszystkiego inaczej”.
Would you like a slice of £250,000 to start a business which will solve a pressing problem? Em Scicluna joined me on the show today to tell us about a new scholarship programme for 18-22 year olds, launched by business accelerator TwinklHive.Em is TwinklHive's Resident Growth Manager at Twinkl Educational Publishing. She outlines what’s the scholarship includes, who can apply and how to do so, and what Twinkl are looking for.Em also covers some other entrepreneurs supported by TwinklHive before this scheme – and her own background before taking on this role.Also on the show: a bumper bonanza of business book recommendations with excerpts from interviews with purpose-driven entrepreneurs Johnny Pawlik and Sarah David, each talking about books which made a dramatic, powerful impact on their businesses and their lives.
Book "Jump Start Your Career Now!", Sarah David, Ph.D.Tech Tools & Resources I use in BusinessGroove Funnels: With the lifetime legacy option, this powerful platform eliminates monthly subscription costs for 20+ technology tools business owners need to run their business. Save hundreds in business subscription fees per month with one platform! With the lifetime legacy option pay once and never pay again, the free lite version also available ...NO CREDIT CARD REQUIRED! Legacy Move Lifetime AccessFree Version - No Credit Card Required JVology: Your ultimate Joint Venture Checklist. Learn how to build strong JV partnerships to grow your business.JV Partnership ChecklistFiverr: The easiest way to get things done!Entrepreneurial Connections Connect with Dr. Sarah Davidwww.linkedin.com/in/drsarahdavidhttps://www.facebook.com/drsarahdavid/
Dr. Sarah Davis was named by Forbes as a Top Career Resource and is the author of "Jump Start Your Career Now!" Dr. David host the Empowered Womenpreneur podcast where she shared power moves, business tips to monetize your brand, and insights from special guests to take your business, career, health, wealth, life, and legacy to QUEEN STATUS!Dr. Davis is an award-winning writer and founder of the National Institute for Career Empowerment (NICE). she believes that entrepreneurs need space to come together to create, connect, and collaborate, and during this episode listeners will be empowered and realize it's time to brand their brilliance.
Today, Rhonda and David answer several challenging questions submitted by listeners like you. What schools of therapy are embedded in TEAM? Do negative feelings cause negative thoughts? Or do negative thoughts cause negative feelings? Or both? Or neither? “Can TEAM-CBT help bipolar patients during the depressed phase?” How do you make Externalization of Voices work? I get stuck! For example, my patient said, "It's unfair that I cannot get a job!" Is there a cure for OCD? 1. What schools of therapy are embedded in TEAM? Dear Dr. Burns, I have some questions specifically about T.E.A.M. therapy. You mention in a blog post that T.E.A.M. therapy "integrates features and techniques from more than a dozen schools of therapy." I'm aware of many of the CBT techniques you use, but I don't think I've read yet of any technique belonging to any other schools of therapy. Would you be so kind as to mention such techniques? Madelen Hi Madelen, This is important because I believe we need to get away from competing schools of therapy and need to create a new, data-driven structure for therapy based on research on how therapy works, which is what TEAM is. At the M = Methods part of the session, you can include methods from any school of therapy. Here are some of the schools of therapy that I draw upon TEAM-CBT. Individual / Interpersonal downward arrow: same (psychoanalytic / psychodynamic) Flooding / Experimental technique: behavior therapy (exposure) Externalization of Voices: Gestalt / Psychodrama / Buddhism Acceptance Paradox: Buddhism Self-Defense Paradigm: REBT CBA / Paradoxical CBA / Devil’s Advocate: Motivational techniques Identify the distortions / examine the evidence: cognitive therapy Empathy: Rogerian (humanistic) therapy Five Secrets / Forced Empathy: Interpersonal therapy Shame-Attacking Exercises: Humor-based therapy / Buddhism Be Specific / Let’s Define Terms: Semantic Feared Fantasy: Role-Playing / Psychodrama / Exposure One-Minute Drill / Relationship Probe: Couple’s Therapy Time Projection / Memory Rescripting: Hypnotherapy Anti-Procrastination Sheet: Behavioral activation therapy (Lewinsohn-type therapy) Brief Mood Survey / Evaluation of Therapy Session: data-driven therapy Talk Show Host / Smile and Hello Practice / Flirting Training: Modeling / teaching effective social behavior Storytelling: indirect hypnosis. Positive Reframing: Paradoxical psychotherapy. Hidden emotion technique: psychoanalytic / psychodynamic Do you need more? Can provide if you want. Let me know why you have this particular interest!At any rate, I really enjoyed and appreciate your thoughtful questions, thanks!David 2. Do negative feelings cause negative thoughts? Or do negative thoughts cause negative feelings? Or both? Or neither? Hello Dr Burns, I would like to thank you for your podcasts. I greatly enjoy listening to them and find them very much helpful both in my personal life and my work as a psychologist. I do have a question: you talk about how cognitive distortions cause anxiety and depression. Are cognitive distortions also a result of depression and anxiety? For instance, if a person was to become depressed after experiencing loss, would they then discount the positive in their lives to a larger extent, for example? Thank you very much! Audrey Hi Audrey, Yes, depression creates a negative bias in perceptions, so you pick out information and details that support your distorted thoughts, like "I'm a loser" or "my case is hopeless." My research, which I'll report in my new book, Feeling Great (sept 2020) indicates that negative thoughts trigger feelings of depression and anxiety, which, in turn trigger more negative thoughts. This is a negative vicious cycle. There is also a positive cycle, in that positive thoughts that you believe to be true trigger positive feelings, which, in turn trigger more positive thoughts! Thanks for the question, Audrey. david 3. “Can TEAM-CBT help bipolar patients during the depressed phase?” Name: Sarah Comment: Hi, Dr. Burns. I am a big fan of your work and very much enjoy reading your blogs and listening to you and Fabrice on you weekly podcasts. I am writing with a question that has to do with the depression side of bipolar disorder and the potential usefulness of CBT. I have not heard you speak about this topic before. My sister in law lives in Switzerland and has been diagnosed with a fairly severe case of bipolar disorder. She does not cycle rapidly, but her manic and depressive states are quite severe. In fact, she has been hospitalized several times during her manic episodes. For the first time in her life, I believe my sister in law has finally accepted the fact that she is bipolar, and she is actively pursuing treatment and trying to get better. After hearing me talk about all the great information I have learned from you, my husband has hunted down several CBT practitioners in Switzerland, in the hopes that changing my sister in law’s thoughts will help her navigate the overwhelming depression she is currently experiencing. Unfortunately, most of the practitioners she has contacted have said that they cannot help her, because she has bipolar disorder. Of course, this is only adding to her sense of hopelessness. In your opinion, could CBT and challenging negative thought distortions be helpful to someone who is bipolar and currently experiencing the depressive side of the disease? In my mind (a layperson who has used CBT to help with panic disorder) it seems so obvious that it could help, but several Swiss psychotherapists seem to disagree with me! Are these therapists afraid to take on a complicated case or is there really nothing they can do? I would love to hear your take on it. Thank you so much for your endless work helping people to feel good! Sarah David will describe his experience running the lithium clinic in Philadelphia at the VA hospital, and will discuss the very important role of good psychotherapy for bipolar patients, although medications will also play an important role in the treatment. 4. Externalization of Voices: How do you make it work? I get stuck! "It's unfair that I cannot get a job!" Dear Dr Burns and Rhonda, I've just finished listening to all of the Feeling Good Podcasts. What a gift! My immense gratitude to you and Fabrice for the time and effort that has gone into these podcasts, as well as the wonderful show-notes. I am a family physician and I work with impoverished patients, many of them refugees. Depression and anxiety are common. We can't find CBT therapists for our patients within their means, so I end up trying to provide some counselling despite not having much background or training (a dangerous proposition, I know, but we have little choice.) Medications tend not to be too helpful, as David points out. I am starting to try to integrate TEAM concepts. I have a question about Externalization of Voices. In all of the examples you've shared in the podcast, whenever David does a role reversal and models the positive voice, he always seems to "win huge". I'm less experienced and find I'm not batting 1000. What do you do when neither you nor the patient have been able to win huge? Many thanks again for all you do, Calvin PS The episode on How to Help and How Not to Help was one of the best yet! Hi Calvin, Thanks for the kind comments! Can you tell me what the thought is that you’ve failed with? All the best, David D. Burns, M.D. Hi David, There have been a couple of examples where we could only get a small win. With the first patient, the thought he was tackling was: "It's not fair that I've worked so hard in life, but I can't get a job." I tried modelling self-defense, along the lines of "I've accomplished a lot given how many challenges I've faced." I also tried suggesting the Acceptance Paradox with something like: "It's true that life's not fair. Who said it should be fair?" This was only a 'small win.' I felt stuck. Another patient felt her chronic insomnia was driven by anxiety. She feared she would never sleep well again. The though was "I'm going to be chronically tired and no longer able to enjoy life the way I used to." We tried: "Sure, I may be more tired than I used to be, but I'll still be able to enjoy life to some extent." Again, this was a small win, not enough to crush it. Thanks again for your willingness to help! Calvin David’s response Hi Calvin, All therapeutic failure, pretty much, results from a failure of agenda setting. I’m not sure you’ve been trained in A = Paradoxical Agenda Setting. The A of TEAM is now also called Assessment of Resistance. When people can’t easily crush a Negative Thought, it is nearly always because they are holding on to it. This is called “resistance.” Let’s focus on the first thought, "It's not fair that I've worked so hard in life, but I can't get a job." This thought triggers anger, and anger is the hardest emotion to change because it makes us feel morally superior and often protects us from feelings of inadequacy, failure, or inferiority. If you do not deal with the underlying resistance to change, the patient will defeat your efforts. When you do Positive Reframing, you start with a Daily Mood Log with one specific moment when the patient was upset and wants help. The anger will be only one of a large number of negative emotions the patient circles and rates, and there will always be numerous negative thoughts as well. The negative feelings might also include sad and down, anxious, ashamed, inadequate, abandoned, embarrassed, discouraged / hopeless, frustrated, and a number of anger words like annoyed, resentful, mad, and so forth. This is super abbreviated, but you would then do A = Paradoxical Agenda Setting (also now called Assessment of Resistance.) You would start with a Straightforward or (better in this case) Paradoxical Invitation—does the patient want help with how he’s feeling? You might tell him he has every right to feel angry and upset and might not want help with his negative feelings as long as he has no job. If he insists he DOES want help, you can ask the Miracle Cure Question, and steer him toward saying he’d like all of his negative thoughts and feelings to disappear, so he’d feel happy. Then you can ask the Magic Button question. If like most patients, he says he WOULD push the button, you can tell him there is no Magic Button, but you DO have lots of powerful techniques that could be tremendously helpful. But you’re not sure it would be a good idea to use these techniques. When he asks why not, you could say it would be important to look at the positive aspects of his negative thoughts and feelings first. Then you do Positive Reframing, and together you can list up to 20 or more positives that are based on each negative emotion and each negative feeling. To generate the list of positives, you can ask: 1. What are some benefits, or advantages, of this negative thought or feeling? 2. What does this negative thought or feeling show about me, and my core values, that’s positive and awesome? For example, My sadness is appropriate, given that I don’t have a job. If I was feeling happy about this, it wouldn’t make sense. The sadness shows my passion for life, for work, and for being productive. My anger shows that I have a moral compass and value fairness. My anxiety motivates me to be vigilant and to look for a job, so I don’t get complacent and starve. My anxiety, in other words, is a form of self-love. My anger shows self-respect, since I have a lot to offer and contribute. My hopelessness or discouragement shows that I’m honest and realistic, since I have tried so often and failed. This is just an example, and with a real patient, it can be very powerful as I have the facts and know the patient, whereas in this example I am just making things up. Then once you have a long and incredibly compelling list, you can ask, “Well, given all of those positives, why would you want to press that Magic Button? If you push it, all these positives will go down the drain at the same time that your negative thoughts and feelings disappear. Then you resolve the patient’s dilemma with the Magic Dial. All this is done AFTER E = Empathy (you have to get an A from your patient) and BEFORE using any M = Methods, like externalization of voices. If you do this skillfully, the Externalization of Voices technique will go way better, because the person will be determined to reduce the anger and other negative feelings. But if the patient says he or she does not want to change, and wants to be intensely angry, that’s fine, too! If this is not clear enough, you could also get some paid case consultations from someone at the Feeling Good Institute, which could be invaluable. This is the most challenging and valuable tool of all! Not sure how much training you’ve had in TEAM. There are online classes that are excellent. Also, on my workshop page you can check out my upcoming workshop with Dr. Jill Levitt on resistance. There are podcasts, too, on resistance / paradoxical agenda setting as well as fractal psychotherapy. Thanks! David 5. Is there a cure for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD)? Hi Dr. Burns, I have been suffering from OCD and depression post the delivery of my daughter and have been on antidepressants for the last 7 years. I have recently start going for counseling too with a psychologist. In fact, she is the one who recommended your book which I am finding very useful. Your website is very helpful too. I had just one general question: Are OCD and Depression 100% curable or are they only controllable and one has to be on medicines for the rest of their lives? Reason why I am asking this is the last time we tried to taper down the medicines I ended up having a worse relapse. I want to know if I can plan for a second pregnancy. I know you do not reply to personal messages but would really be grateful if you could reply to this mail Looking forward to hearing from you Regards "Betsy" In my dialogue with Rhonda, I emphasize that I rarely use medications in the treatment of anxiety and depression, including OCD, and I would urge this listener to use the search function on my website to search for podcasts and blogs on antidepressants, anxiety, OCD, and Relapse Prevention Training, and you will find lots of specific resources. For example, if you type in OCD, you will find the Sara story (episode 162) plus lots of additional great resources on OCD, including podcasts 43 - 45 (this page provides links to all the podcasts), and more. Also, my books, When Panic Attacks, and the Feeling Good Handbook, could be very helpful, and you can link to them from my books page. I use four models in the treatment of OCD, and you can find them if you listen to the basic podcasts on anxiety and its treatment. They are the Hidden Emotion Model, the Motivational Model, the Exposure Model, and the Cognitive Model. All are crucial important for recovery, and clearly explained in the podcasts on anxiety. Thanks for listening today, and thanks for all the kind comments and totally awesome questions! David and Rhonda
This is Chris's second podcast with Sarah. In the first, which is episode seven of this series, you can hear her backstory, some of her work-related achievements, and her approach to learning and to self-care. They gave this podcast the somewhat ambitious title of “the leader as philosopher, learner and listener” and imagined that it might be more of a conversation than an interview. Sarah has said previously that our politicians are no longer philosophers. She believes this matters because we live in a volatile, uncertain, complex, ambiguous (VUCA) world and things are grey rather than black and white. Philosophers embrace the idea that changing our mind is a legitimate, in fact healthy, thing to do. And politics matters more than we might imagine: politicians enact the laws that govern our everyday lives. Chris thinks that there are parallels in business. His favourite quote is from Emmy van Deurzen, who is an existential psychotherapist, and she says “Passive living comes easily; one can always fall back on it. Actively living requires much practice and study, as does any art.” Sarah is a big fan of the stoics. Stoicism acknowledges that life is a struggle and rarely goes according to plan. It helps her to appreciate the highs but not get too attached to them and to weather the lows in the knowledge that they too will pass. We have a tendency to ‘gloss over' things when they aren't OK and to say that they'll be better in the future. In reality when one challenge goes away another will replace it. Chris would say that it helps in an organisation if the leader has a clear sense of purpose and can articulate what the current struggle is for. Without such meaning the organisation is in danger of becoming a product of the system in which it operates. Chris cites Tracy Allen (episode 12) as such a leader. For Sarah values and purpose help with prioritisation. However, she understands why some people don't have clarity around values and purpose; she says “it's scary.” Chris says it's what Jean Paul Sartre would have described as “existential angst”, the anxiety caused by a person's awareness of her unlimited freedom and the corresponding responsibility. In his book ‘Compassionate Leadership' Chris includes ‘a spiritual journey' under routes to development and asks Sarah where she is on that journey. Buddhism and the stoics have been reference points for her, along with Alain de Botton, Christian Tippett and David Whyte. Chris describes himself right now as a ‘Christian Existentialist.' He believes in God, but also believes we need to take personal responsibility. He has found the books of Richard Rohr helpful, along with a lot of one-to-one conversations. He has come to a point where he can be comfortable with uncertainty. Sarah says that “a lot of therapy” has helped her, as have podcasts, in that you hear people's thought processes out loud. When it comes to helping leaders clarify their values and purpose, Sarah sometimes uses the question “Which are those moments in your life when you have most thrived?” Beyond philosophy, there's a whole lot more for a leader to master. Chris makes the distinction between informational learning – lectures, training, what passes for learning in most universities and business schools – and transformational learning – learning that enhances our ability to handle complex thoughts and ideas, and to consider our thoughts themselves objectively. Sarah says that she thinks this idea is useful and that transformational learning helps us close the gap between the knowing and the doing. For each person, the nature of the transformational experience that is most effective will be different, but what is important is that we get out there and experiment. Sarah recommends the writing of Seth Godin, who writes so well about mustering the courage to experiment. Both Sarah and Chris agree that talking with friends can be transformational, and Chris cites a book group that he is in where...
Sarah is Managing Director of Thrive Consulting Collaborative. She has a side hustle, Love Work More, with friend Richard Ferguson. Thrive is based on the premise that we all have enough time to prosper and works with organisations and leaders to achieve this. Love Work More provides people with tactics and strategies to find a working life that they love. Sarah originally qualified as a lawyer then moved into legal recruitment. After an MBA she moved into senior roles in professional services management and also joined the board of the Children's Society. Subsequently she and her husband moved to Colorado where she became CEO of an autism school. “It was a job that was about meaning rather than making money” she says. 18 months later, her husband Jonathan died in a car crash leaving Sarah with two young boys. She moved back to the UK and set up her consulting business. Six years on she reflects that “friendships and reading” have kept her sane. She has found that while “not everything has a reason, you can give everything meaning.” Sarah is a team player. “I think it is that sharing.” Sarah runs Thrive as a social enterprise and gives between 10 and 20% of her time pro bono. She is currently doing this with a programme at The Pankhurst Trust. During her career she often found herself the only woman in the room. Her sporting knowledge and background helped her cope, but in her coaching she tries to provide women with other strategies to flourish in what are often male dominated professions. There are 50 coaches and 50 coachees on the programme at the moment. Her current coachee runs a social enterprise in Manchester. “There is so much potential in all of us…” Sarah is disappointed by the current quality of political debate. She observed that in times gone by our politicians were our philosophers. She became involved in politics because she felt that the world was moving both environmentally and socially in a negative direction. She joined the Women's Equality Party several years ago and has since enjoyed canvassing and discussing politics in the town centre on Saturday mornings. All the research shows that “more equal societies are happier.” One of her proudest achievements at work related to a major restructuring in 2009. “It was about courage and values.” The CEO wanted everyone to feel heard, listened to and supported, so he and Sarah met everyone in the organisation. Her advice to her 18-year old self would be to find a coach or mentor, and to learn about mindfulness, meditation and stoicism. Those things would have stood her in good stead for the events of the coming 30 years. She would have also told herself that “you're going to be OK.” Your relationships and friendships will see you through. Sarah's has to work hard at self-care. Running, hill-walking and pull-ups(!) feature prominently. She encourages everyone to take some physical exercise daily, if only 15 minutes. She is big on visual cues to make things happen and so has fixed up a pull-up bar in her hallway. The running developed as a response to grief. The death of her husband profoundly changed her life. It devastated yet also transformed her and “the results of it have been inspirational in some ways.” He was her soul mate. The feeling that “we don't know how much time we've got on our clock” informs the way that she works with people. She was deeply moved by the response of people after Jonathan's death. The community in Colorado brought them a meal three times a week for three months. Reading is one of Sarah's passions, but she encourages all aspiring leaders to find their natural way of learning. There is a reading room on her website thrive.co.com. She is an enthusiast for medium.com. Regarding podcasts she recommends ‘Hurry Slowly' by Jocelyn Glei – time and energy management is a common theme of her work with leaders – and also ‘How to Fail' by Elizabeth Day. ‘How to Own the Room' by Viv...
The conditions that brought us to the series of events in WESTPAC in 2017 did not happen over night. They did not happen in one PCS cycle, or under one command climate. Layer by layer from many sources, it took time to get to where we found it.Our guest for the full hour to discuss his views of the latent causes of what is now generally accepted as a systemic failure of a "new normal" will be J.C. Harvey, Jr., Admiral USN (Ret.).Admiral Harvey retired from the Navy in November, 2012 after serving as the Commander, U.S. Fleet Forces Command, in Norfolk, Virginia.In his 39 year Navy career, he specialized in naval nuclear propulsion, surface ship & Carrier strike-group operations & Navy-wide manpower management/personnel policy development. He served in a variety of operational command positions at sea, as the Navy’s Chief of Naval Personnel (the senior uniformed human resources official in the Navy) & as the Director, Navy Staff immediately prior to commanding U.S. Fleet Forces.Since his retirement, Admiral Harvey has joined the Board of Directors of the Navy Memorial Foundation, where he currently serves as Chairman of the Board, & serves as an Outside Director of AT Kearney, PSDS.On 12 January, 2014, he was sworn in as a member of Governor McAuliffe’s cabinet where he served as the Commonwealth’s Secretary of Veteran & Defense Affairs until 31 August, 2017.A few months later, he joined the Institute of Defense Analyses as the Director, Strategy, Forces & Resources Division.Born and raised in Baltimore, MD, Admiral Harvey is a graduate of the Phillips Exeter Academy, the US Naval Academy & the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.Admiral Harvey & his wife, Mary Ellen, now reside in Vienna, Virginia & have two grown children, Sarah & David.
As we inch ever closer to the end Barry and I start suffering from voice huskiness from chatting for so long, but that's not going to stop us! We call in absolute gem Sarah Millman to chat with us about her comic work, how retail work nightmares can be writing gold, video games and more! There's a brief interlude in which I admit I can't really handle time differences and Barry & I chat about SPCP Live and The British Heart Foundation, before Sarah rejoins us for more Disney chat. Also, Rich returns, and he's quite drunk! We're then joined by the amazing David Sobolov; voice actor and all-round brilliant dude. We chat about his acting and voice acting career (and the role that almost ended it), the importance of kindness, 'Vin Ethanol' and loads more! Please note that the competition in the episode is now closed. Episode Theme - 'Scarface (Push It To The Limit)' by Paul Engemann End Theme - 'The Glow' by Willie Hutch Justgiving Donation Link: www.justgiving.com/spcplive3 Timings: 00:00:00: Sarah Millman, 01:04:13: The Return of Sarah Millman, 01:14:50: David Sobolov I'd like to extend an apology to Sarah, David and the listeners; something went awry in this segment so it seems that guests are answering questions before we've actually finished asking them, meaning there's more talking over one another and extended gaps. I'm really sorry; I have no idea what happened or why, and there's no way for me to fix it. I still think it's worth a listen though, as Sarah & David are fabulous! Disclaimer: The SPCP Live 3 episodes will be mostly unedited. This means they will be put out as close to their live versions as possible, including (but not limited to); audio delays and the resultant accidentally-talking-over-each-other, bodily function noises (aka the World's Loudest Sneezes), slightly-too-long sections in which we try to deal with the mountain of technical problems on the day... I believe they are still very enjoyable though, and I hope you have as much fun listening in as Barry & I did when broadcasting!
Sarah David runs consultancy Thrive. She has worked at an executive level in a £1.5 billion turnover law firm, and for small businesses, charities, not for profits and startups."As long as you're dealing with people the challenges remain the same," she told me yesterday. The live radio broadcast of this interview generated some of the most positive feedback of any episode to date.Sarah works with teams and leaders to transform their performance and financial results. At the core of dealing with challenges, she says, is "effective communication, clarity of purpose, and leaders willing to lead through change."Consultant, mentor and coach Sarah talks about intentional leadership, developing positive habits, supporting transformation. And, as an avid reader, the business books she rates most highly.She's also frank, direct and anti-fragile when it comes to addressing the impact of an enormous personal tragedy. What to do when "option A" is no longer available.The podcast also features social entrepreneur Dulma Clark of Soul of Africa, which makes and sells "shoes that change lives." Full timings and show notes: https://www.jamieveitch.co.uk/2018/03/thriving-with-sarah-david-plus-dulma-clark/
In this episode, our fourth installment in our This Viterbi Life series, Shuntaro talks to Sarah, David and Matt about their involvements in sports at USC. Listen on to hear about how athletics shaped these students' lives.
My guests Sarah & David Trustman are the authors of The Memory Arts (Secundi Millennii) Fundamentals Boosk A and B. David is also illustrated and co-authored with Dean Haspiel the web comic Godslap, now available in trade paperback. We talk about life on Sarah & David's berry farm, the history of mnemonics and how their book can help expand your memory. All this and more on this episode of Creator Talks! About David Trustman http://www.davidtrustmancreations.com Sarah & David's Book The Memory Arts http://www.davidtrustmancreations.com/the-memory-arts Creator Talks www.creatortalks.com
It's just a bunch of hocus pocus! It's Halloween tonight in Salem so why don't you join Chris Donovan and his guest Sarah David as they visit the old Sanderson house? We'll be here until sunrise talking about the 1993 Disney classic Hocus Pocus. So come on: leave your weird colonial Halloween party, grab your lucky rat tail, down a empty cup of cider, and join us as we brew up a scary fun time. Just don't light any candles when you're in here, because they can be a witch to put out. Also big shoutout to Marshall Hicks and Kat Wells from the incredible Boys and Ghouls podcast. Kat was nice enough to let me use her cover of 'Come Little Children' in this episode. Check them out at boysandghouls.podbean.com or you can listen to their show on iTunes as well. Just listen to one episode and I guarantee they'll put a spell on you.
On this episode, Sarah & David mix up some flaming sodomite cocktails and tackle crazy religious nuts as well as
On air callers share deeply with the audience,showing the power of radio in its capacity to reach the Human spirit and build community.
Dr. Sarah David is the Founder of Social Savvy Sarah and our guest on Social Geek Radio this week. Sarah is a personal branding strategist and works with a World-Class Team of 7 renowned business partners, talented graphic designers. She is known for her love of entrepreneurship, gadgets, innovation and inquisitiveness. Sarah recently completed a series of blogs posts on “On the Road to Brand YOU for Social Media Marketing Success ~ Brand YOU” and will share her tips on: Brand Positioning Benefits of Branding Signatures Branding Through Taglines Don't know where to start self branding or why? Not sure how to create that recognizable image? Then this is the show for you! Bring your questions to the chat room or tweet them with #SocialGeekRadio and we will answer them live.
Carolyn Carr, deputy director of the National Portrait Gallery, discusses the photograph "Sarah, David" by artist Yolanda del Amo . She also discussed the Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition.